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Why don't we all do Kemach Yashan? It says in clearly says in the Torah, in Vayikra 23:14:

  1. You shall not eat bread or [flour made from] parched grain or fresh grain, until this very day, until you bring your God's sacrifice. [This is] an eternal statute throughout your generations in all your dwelling places."

יד.וְלֶחֶם וְקָלִי וְכַרְמֶל לֹא תֹאכְלוּ עַד עֶצֶם הַיּוֹם הַזֶּה עַד הֲבִיאֲכֶם אֶת קָרְבַּן אֱלֹהֵיכֶם חֻקַּת עוֹלָם לְדֹרֹתֵיכֶם בְּכֹל משְׁבֹתֵיכֶם

Is it a commandment Deorata to only eat Kemach Yashan (old grain), and avoid Chadash (new grain)?

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  • Related question: judaism.stackexchange.com/q/6644/5323
    – MTL
    Nov 13, 2014 at 0:18
  • NS23 Can you source your contention that we don't do this?
    – Double AA
    Nov 13, 2014 at 3:47
  • I think the Pnei Yehoshua wrote a small book answering this question. So it's pretty broad (despite the concise answer below). Not voting to close, just pointing out that it's pretty complicated. Nov 13, 2014 at 3:55

2 Answers 2

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There are four reasons some permit chodosh, as described in this article:

1

Many authorities permitted the new grain, because the new crop may have been planted early enough to be permitted, and, in addition, the possibility exists that the available grain is from a previous crop year, which is certainly permitted. This approach accepts that chodosh applies equally in chutz la’aretz as it does in Eretz Yisrael, but contends that when one is uncertain whether the grain available is chodosh or yoshon, one can rely that it is yoshon and consume it. Because of this double doubt, called a sefek sefeika, many major authorities permitted people to consume the obtainable grain (Rama, Yoreh Deah 293).

2

Other authorities permitted the chutz la’aretz grain, relying on the minority of early poskim who treat chodosh as a mitzvah that applies only in Eretz Yisrael (Taz; Aruch Hashulchan). This is based on a Gemara that states that when something has not been ruled definitively, under extenuating circumstances, one may rely on a minority opinion. (Niddah 9b).

This dispute then embroils one in a different issue: When the Gemara rules that under extenuating circumstances one may rely on a minority opinion, is this true only when dealing with a rabbinic prohibition, or may one do so even when dealing with a potential Torah prohibition? The Taz and Aruch Hashulchan, who permitted chodosh for this reason, conclude that one may follow a minority opinion even when dealing with a potential Torah prohibition.

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Another halachic basis to permit use of the new grain is that chodosh applies only to grain that grows in a field owned by a Jew, and not to grain grown in a field owned by a non-Jew. Since most fields are owned by gentiles, one can be lenient when one does not know the origin of the grain and assume that it was grown in a gentile’s field, and it is therefore exempt from chodosh laws. This last approach, often referred to simply as “the Bach’s heter,” is the basis upon which most Ashkenazic Jewry relied.

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There is also an original position of the Kenesses Yechezkel who concludes that, although chodosh applies both in chutz la’aretz and to grain of a gentile, it does not apply when both circumstances apply simultaneously (Shu’t Yoreh Deah #41). Thus, those residing in chutz la’aretz have a right to follow the accepted practice, as indeed many, if not most, of the gedolei Yisrael did.

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    5) מוטב שיהיו שוגגין ואל יהיו מזידין
    – Double AA
    Nov 13, 2014 at 3:50
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    6) We don't have korbanot today, so עַד הֲבִיאֲכֶם אֶת קָרְבַּן אֱלֹהֵיכֶם cannot apply. But the same (Talmudic) halachic process that declared it applied post-Churban also produced analyses by which it was permitted. Nov 13, 2014 at 4:02
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    That's awfully Karaitic...
    – Double AA
    Nov 13, 2014 at 4:04
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    I don't see why electric shavers and sales of chametz are relevant. The Shulchan Arukh permits the former and the latter is obviously just a meta-halakhic thing (assuming the sale is done by someone knowledgeable, which is usually the case nowadays). Most orthodox Jews assume hem didn't amru hotzaah, but rather Hu amarah.
    – Double AA
    Nov 13, 2014 at 4:09
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    8) The Baal Shem Tov had a dream that it's permitted.
    – Double AA
    Nov 13, 2014 at 7:55
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In response to why people are lax with the issur chodosh nowadays, R. J. Waxman suggests 4 potential halachik arguments. Unfortunately, none of these reasons withstand real scrutiny:

  1. The Rama cited is quoting a Rosh who explicitly requires investigating whether there is indeed a double uncertainty. If it can be reasonably determined that the grain is at least as likely chodosh as not, the Rama would forbid it, with the caveat that one shouldn’t inform those of the problem if they would not correct their practice in response (mutav sheyehu shoggegin v’al yehu mezidin). Considering that those who keep yoshon rely on a readily available "Guide to Chodosh" to determine cutoff dates based on USDA crop reports, the Rama’s leniency seems poorly applied to the issue of contemporary chodosh consumption.

  2. Besides for the concern raised (e.g. by the Shach) that the leniency of “kdai hu lismoch alav b’shaas hadechak” is only applied in the gemara to Rabbinic prohibitions, never biblical ones, there is a fundamental problem with using the Taz’s kula. In most contemporary Jewish communities, it’s simply no longer a shaas hedechak in that comparably priced yoshon alternatives are readily available.

3-4. It’s also not so simple to rely on the chiddush of the Bach (or Knesses Yechezkel) since he is explicitly arguing with the mainstream rishonim and is generally rejected by the subsequent achronim, including the GR”A, Shach, and Taz (to name a few).

Because of these weaknesses, and for the sake of intellectual honesty, I would argue that the basis for the lax custom is better answered from a socio-historical perspective rather than a strict Halachik one. Specifically, I would suggest that the kula nowadays is based on a "perfect storm" of factors that caused Jews otherwise quite strict in matters of kashrus to be lax with regard to chodosh.

Firstly, as opposed to other maachalos assuros which are fairly fixed, chodosh varies in applicability both by location and season. As such, communities that never had to worry about chodosh, when transplanted to a different locale, suddenly did. Furthermore, since alternatives were not readily available, there was a genuine concern on the part of poskim that a stringent ruling would just be ignored (see Rama and Rosh mentioned earlier "mutav sheyehu shoggegin"). In addition, there is a fairly obvious trend in the derech hapesak of Chachmei Ashkenaz going back to the Baalei Tosfos to be "melamed zechus" on a minhag yisrael. As such a diverse set of arguments were presented to try and justify the lenient attitude. (Hassidim, who often are amongst the most stringent on issues of maachalos assuros, are also lax because of a tradition that the Bach appeared in a dream to the Besht and encouraged him to be lax. Interestingly, it's recorded that while the Besht was indeed lenient for a while, he subsequently returned to his original observing of yoshon.) Finally, in an ironic twist on "chodosh assur min hatorah" there is a contemporary popular view in right-wing circles to keep old practices even when the original reasoning no longer applies. In spite of this, there is a growing trend toward yoshon-observance.

In addition, I would add that nowadays people generally rely on popularly accepted kosher symbols which shifts the a question to why are the rabbis behind the symbols lax. With regard to the most famous kosher symbol, the O-U, Kashrus guidelines are set by Rav Herschel Schachter, Rav Yisrael Belsky, and Rav Menachem Genack.

Rav Schachter justifies the custom based on the Aruch Hashulchan who cites the then recently discovered Ohr Zarua that was melamed zechus by combining 2 chidushim: 1. We follow the view that Chodosh in chutz laaretz is only miderabanan; 2. that gezeira was only applied to nearby lands to Israel. Rav Belsky has suggested that while Hassidim perhaps rely on the Bach, misnagdim should really follow the Rama who forbids chodosh. He subsequently suggested that even misnagdim perhaps rely on the Bach. Rav Belsky himself, as well as Rav Genack, are themselves strict and don't eat chodosh (though the O-U does still certify it, even apparently where there is no doubt that it is chodosh. - perhaps they reason that for the O-U it would be a shaas hadechak since they would lose clients;).

(Rav Mordechai Willig also rules leniently, though he apparently doesn't trust the USDA crop reports or the guide to chodosh and maintains that US grain doesn't hit store shelves till it's yoshon. This reasoning may also be used by Rav Nachum Rabinovitch who I believe also invokes the Taz in his sefer, Siach Nachum. The O-U presumably does not cite such a position since they themselves separately certify yoshon flour for bakeries and restaurants which they discontinue once the flour is chodosh [at which point they just affix a regular O-U].)

Finally, with regard to the final question of: "Is it a commandment..." The answer is yes. No posek matirs chodosh in Eretz Yisrael since that is not up for debate. It has been a generational practice however to justify the already prevalent lax attitude in the Diaspora where there is more room for debate, at least with the d'oraissa issue. I think every intellectually honest person would agree that none of the lax positions would have been taken, however, had the masses not already been lax, or (at least in earlier generations) had they been likely to follow a ban on the practice.

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  • I don't see what this post adds towards answering the question. We can have lots of fun rejecting all of RJW's reasons (it wouldn't be that difficult), but that wouldn't answer this question.
    – Double AA
    Dec 10, 2014 at 23:15
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    The question didn't specifically ask for a plausible halachik heter; it asked for an explanation of the practice. To this end, I provided several social/historical reasons for the prevalent lax attitude.
    – Loewian
    Dec 11, 2014 at 17:50
  • My sense in general is that poskim prefer not to impose new chumras and will usually settle on a reason to be meikil even if it's not a terribly strong one.
    – Loewian
    Dec 11, 2014 at 17:58
  • "R. J. Waxman suggests 4 potential halachik arguments" - while it would be nice to take credit for it, I was really just copy-pasting from Rabbi Kaganoff's article. Aug 20, 2019 at 12:58
  • I don't think the answer gives the basic reason fairly: The custom in Ashkenaz has long been to be lenient. You mention the "masses", but both the Bach and the Taz and others long ago pointed out that even their great rabbonim and their students were lenient. The "weak answers" you mention are the attempts of these gedolim to explain that undisputed fact. And to this day, there are many gedolim (they tell stories about R' Moshe, for instance) who simply accepted that minhag as the halacha whether we have good explanations or not.
    – MichoelR
    Nov 29, 2021 at 15:29

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