Collection of the Words of the Lord
Jacob Frank
ca. 1760
I had a vision in Salonika, as though the following words were said to somebody: Go lead Yakov the wise into the rooms and when you and he come to the first room, I admonish you that all the doors and gates be opened to him. When I entered the first room, a rose was given to me as a sign by which I could go on to the next and so on consequenter fro…
Creator Bio
Jacob Frank
Jacob (Jakob) Frank, born in Podolia, was a controversial and charismatic messianic figure who attracted a significant Jewish following in Eastern Europe. The son of a purported Sabbatian, he was raised in the Ottoman Empire. As a young adult, he became acquainted with Sabbatian leaders in Salonika. In 1755, he returned to Poland, where he formed a movement of local Sabbatians, advocating against the Talmud and for abrogation of Jewish law. His followers were arrested by the authorities and formally converted to Catholicism. In a staged anti-Jewish disputation in Lviv (Lemberg), in 1759, Frank's followers affirmed the libelous claim that the Talmud required Jews to use Christian blood. This shut off any possibility of reconciliation with the Jewish community. Soon, however, Frankists were viewed with suspicion by Christian clergy as well; they led an ostentatious and libertine lifestyle. Frank was arrested in 1760 and imprisoned for thirteen years. After his release, he moved to Moravia and then to Germany. His major work, Zbiór słów pańskich (Collection of the Words of the Lord) is a Polish-language collection of his sayings, tales, and parables.
Related Guide
European Rabbinic Scholarship
Despite the challenges of the early modern period, rabbinic scholarship flourished in Central and Eastern Europe in the latter half of the eighteenth century and the first half of the nineteenth century.
You may also like
Derushe ha-tselah (Sermons [of Landau])

Portrait of Eva Frank
