If you have received an
email from me inviting you to a gathering on January 30, do not respond. I have
been hacked.
If you have received an
email from me inviting you to a gathering on January 30, do not respond. I have
been hacked.
Three times on today’s daf TB Menakhot 9 Rabbi Yoḥanan and Reish Lakish find themselves on opposite sides of a disagreement. One of these disagreements concerns whether you’re allowed to mix the oil in the minkha offering outside the walls of the Temple courtyard. The mixing of the oil and the flour was a three-step process. Yetzika (יצִיקה)-the oil was placed at the very bottom of the bowl. Then the fine flour was added on top of it. Belilah (בְּלִילָה)-oil was placed on top of the flour and then it was mixed together.
“It was stated: If one mixed the oil of a meal offering into it outside the wall of the Temple courtyard, Rabbi Yoḥanan says that it is disqualified, and Reish Lakish says that it is valid. Reish Lakish says: It is valid, as it is written: “And he shall pour oil upon it, and put frankincense upon it” (Leviticus 2:1), and then it is written: “And he shall bring it to Aaron’s sons the priests; and he shall remove” (Leviticus 2:2).
“Reish
Lakish explains: The Sages derived from here that from the removal of the
handful onward the rites performed with the meal offering are solely a
mitzva of the priesthood. Accordingly, the verse taught about
pouring and mixing that they are valid when performed by a non-priest.
And from the fact that the priesthood is not required for the
mixing, it may be derived that it is also not required that its
performance be inside the walls of the Temple courtyard.”
(Sefaria.org translation)
Tosefot ד"ה וּמִדִכְהוּנָה notices that Reish Lakish’s argument is not a very strong one. One cannot draw the conclusion that just because a non-priest may do the mixing doesn’t mean the mixing can be done outside the Temple courtyard. A non-priest may slaughter the animal sacrifice (shekhita-שְׁחִיטָה), but it has to take place within the walls of the temple courtyard.
Tosefot provides two solutions. Conceptually shekhita may be permitted outside the Temple courtyard, but practically it is impossible for the following reason. Only a kohen may capture the blood spurting forth from the neck of the animal in a bowl and bring it to the altar. For obvious reasons, this has to be done immediately after the animal is slaughtered and within the Temple courtyard. Their second solution is already recorded earlier in the Gemara. Animal sacrifices are inherently different than minkha offerings. One cannot necessarily learn a law from each other.
As always, the halakha follows Rabbi Yoḥanan over Reish Lakish.
See Rambam’s Mishneh Torah, Sefer
Avodah, Sacrifices Rendered Unfit, Chapter 11, Halakha 6.
Today’s daf TB Menakhot 7 teaches us how to succeed in our learning. The Gemara relates the story of Rabbi Avimi and his student Rav Ḥisda.
“Rabbi
Avimi was learning tractate Menaḥot in the study
hall of Rav Ḥisda. It doesn’t make sense that Rabbi Avimi was studying in the study hall of his student Rav Ḥisda. Rav
Ḥisda should have been studying his teacher’s study hall. It’s like saying that
one of my Talmud professors came to study Talmud in one of my adult education
classes.
“Avimi was in fact the teacher, but tractate Menaḥot was uprooted for him, i.e., he forgot it, and Avimi came before his student Rav Ḥisda to help him recall his learning. The Gemara asks: If Rav Ḥisda was in fact Avimi’s student, let Avimi send for him and Rav Ḥisda come to Avimi. The Gemara responds: Avimi thought that this would be more helpful in this matter.” (Sefaria.org translation)
Rashi ד"ה מִסְתַיְיעָא מִילְתָא explains why Rabbi Avimi felt it
would be more helpful for him to go to his student rather than his student come
to him. He quotes TB Megillah 6b. “Because (If one says) I have labored and I have found
success, believe him.” By going the
extra mile in order to learn successfully, Rabbi Avimi thought the reversal of
the normal procedure would be worth it.
Putting in
the extra effort and working hard to achieve your goals in any endeavor will be
a guarantee of success.
On the second day of Passover , the 16th day of Nisan, an ’omer of barley was offered up on the altar. All new grains were permitted to be eaten after this minkhat ha’omer, the omer of meal offering, was placed on the altar. What happens when the ’omer meal offering from which a priest removed a handful not for its own sake? The Gemara provides three different answers.
Opinion #1 “Rav
says: With regard to the omer meal offering, i.e., the
measure of barley brought as a communal offering on the sixteenth of Nisan (see
Leviticus 23:9–14), if the priest removed a handful from it not for
its own sake it is disqualified. It is disqualified since an omer
meal offering came for a specific purpose, namely, to permit the
consumption of the new crop, and this meal offering did not permit
the consumption of the new crop because its rites were performed not for its
own sake” (Sefaria.org translation) In other words, a brand-new minkhat ha’omer needs to be offered up
and no new grain can be eaten until this is accomplished. (TB Menakhot 4a, Sefaria.org
translation)
Opinion #2 “And
Rabbi Shimon ben Lakish says, with regard to an omer meal
offering from which a priest removed a handful not for its own
sake, that it is valid and the handful is burned on the altar. But
its remainder may not be consumed by the priests until a priest brings
another omer meal offering on the same day and thereby permits
the first offering for consumption, as the prohibition against consuming the
new crop remains in effect.
“The Gemara
asks: But if its remainder may not be consumed by the priests until
they bring another omer meal offering, how can the handful
removed from this omer meal offering be sacrificed upon the
altar? Before the omer meal offering is sacrificed, the new crop is
forbidden for consumption, and the verse states: “From the well-watered
pastures of Israel; for a meal offering, and for a burnt offering, and for
peace offerings” (Ezekiel 45:15), from which it is derived that one may
sacrifice only from that which is permitted to the Jewish people.
“Rav
Adda bar Ahava said in response: Reish Lakish holds that an offering
is not considered one whose time has not yet arrived if it is to
be brought on that day. Accordingly, since the new crop will be
permitted for consumption on the same day that this handful was removed from
the omer meal offering, it is already considered fit to be sacrificed
upon the altar.” (TB Menakhot 5, Sefaria.org translation) Reish Lakish presents
a middle position where the minkhat ha’omer is permitted on the altar (which
is but a handful from the container with the barley) and the left over which is
usually consumed by the priest cannot be eaten until a new minkhat ha’omer is
offered.
Opinion #3
“The Gemara previously cited the opinion of Rav that an omer meal
offering from which a handful was removed not for its own sake is disqualified.
The Gemara also cited the opinion of Reish Lakish that this meal offering is
valid but another omer meal offering is necessary to permit the new crop
for consumption. And Rava says: With regard to an omer meal
offering from which the priest removed a handful not for its own
sake, it is valid and its remainder is consumed, and it does not require
another omer meal offering to permit it for consumption. The reason
is that improper intent is effective [mo’elet] to
disqualify an offering only when it is expressed by one who is fit
for the Temple service, and with regard to an item that is fit for the
Temple service, and in a place that is fit for the Temple service.
“Rava elaborates: The condition that improper intent disqualifies only when expressed by one who is fit for the Temple service serves to exclude the intent of a blemished priest, who is disqualified from performing the Temple service. The condition that it disqualifies only when expressed with regard to an item that is fit for the Temple service serves to exclude the omer meal offering, which is generally unfit for the Temple service, as it is a novelty, in that it is brought from barley whereas most meal offerings are brought from wheat. And finally, the condition that it disqualifies only when expressed in a place that is fit for the Temple service serves to exclude sacrificial rites that were performed with improper intent while the altar was damaged. At such a time improper intent does not disqualify an offering, and therefore if the altar is repaired on the same day, the offering may be sacrificed upon the altar.” (Sefaria.org translation)
Rava has the most lenient opinion. No do over is necessary at all because the minkhat ha’omer is kosher and the new grain now is allowed to be eaten. Rashi explains that barley under most circumstances is not fit for the Temple service. Consequently, we can conclude that Rava doesn’t believe that the minkhat ha’omer isn’t a real Temple service to permit the new grain. It’s just a mitzvah. What allows new grain to be eaten? As soon as the sun rises over the eastern horizon we may eat the new grain.
Rambam poskins according to Rava’s position because he is quoted last in
this sugiya. (Sefer Avodah, Laws of
sacrifices rendered unfit, chapter 14, halakha
3)
Winnie the Pooh famously said, “If the person you are talking to doesn’t appear to be listening, be patient. It may simply be that he has a small piece of fluff in his ear.”
I’ve learned over the years that Winnie might be on to
something. When someone won’t listen to you even though following your counsel
would be to their advantage, it may be that their reticence is nothing more
than a small piece of fluff in their ear. Or there may be another hindrance:
Some folks find it hard to listen well because they’re broken and discouraged.
In this week’s Torah portion Vaera God tells Moses to say to the
Israelites: “I will free
you from the labors of the Egyptians and deliver you from their bondage. I will
redeem you with an outstretched arm and through extraordinary chastisements.
And I will take you to be My people, and I will be your God. And you shall know
that I, YHVH, am your God who freed you from the labors of the Egyptians. I
will bring you into the land which I swore to give to Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob, and I will give it to you for a possession, I YHVH” (6:6-8) Thanking God
for delivering us out of slavery, we drink 4 cups of wine, one for each
language of redemption at the Seder table.
Despite promising to redeem the Jewish people by
emphasizing it with four and possibly different languages of redemption, they
didn’t listen because their spirits were broken and their lives were hard. “But when Moses told this to the Israelites,
they would not listen to Moses, their spirits crushed by cruel bondage.”
(6:9). Who can blame them? They were discouraged as the result of their bitter
enslavement in Egypt. That being the case, Israel’s reluctance to listen to
Moses’s instruction called for understanding and compassion, not censure.
What should we do when others won’t listen? Winnie the
Pooh’s words enshrine wisdom: “Be patient.” Love and patience along with
understanding and compassion will help your words being heard.
Daf TB Menakhot 2 cites Rabbi Shimon in two different baraitot which contradict each other.
Baraita
#1 “Rabbi Shimon says: All the meal
offerings from which
a handful was removed not for their sake are fit for sacrifice and they
even satisfy the obligation of the owner. The baraita continues:
Conversely, consecrated animals that were sacrificed not for their sake do not
fulfill the obligation of the owner, as in this regard meal offerings
are not similar to slaughtered offerings. The difference is that
when one removes a handful from a pan meal offering for the
sake of a deep-pan meal offering, its mode of preparation proves
that it is in fact for the sake of a pan meal offering, as the
two offerings differ in appearance. Similarly, with regard to a dry meal
offering, e.g., the meal offering of a sinner, which contains no oil, whose
handful is removed for the sake of a meal offering that is mixed
with oil, its mode of preparation proves that it is for the
sake of a dry meal offering, and one’s improper intent is therefore
disregarded. But with regard to slaughtered offerings it is not so, as
there is one manner of slaughter for all offerings, and one
manner of sprinkling the blood for all offerings, and one
manner of collection of the blood for all offerings. Since the
differentiation between slaughtered offerings is established only through
intention, one who sacrifices an animal offering not for its own sake does not
fulfill the obligation of the owner. Rabbi Shimon apparently disagrees with the
tanna of the mishna on two counts: First, he claims that if the handful
of a meal offering was removed not for its own sake it satisfies the obligation
of the owner, whereas the mishna teaches that the obligation is not fulfilled.
Second, Rabbi Shimon does not differentiate between the meal offering of a
sinner or the meal offering of jealousy, and the other types of meal offerings.”
(Sefaria.org translation)
Baraita #2 “§ The Gemara cites the baraita
that is the basis for the apparent contradiction between the statements of
Rabbi Shimon, which was mentioned in the previous discussion: And a Sage
raises a contradiction from one statement of Rabbi Shimon and
another statement of Rabbi Shimon, as it is taught in a baraita: Rabbi
Shimon says that the verse written concerning the meal offering: “It is
most sacred, as the sin offering, and as the guilt offering” (Leviticus 6:10),
indicates that there are some meal offerings whose halakha is like
that of a sin offering, and there are some whose halakha is like
that of a guilt offering.
"Rabbi Shimon elaborates: The halakha with regard to the meal offering of a sinner is like that of a sin offering. Therefore, if one removed a handful from it not for its own sake, it is disqualified, just like a sin offering that was slaughtered not for its own sake. Conversely, the halakha with regard to a voluntary meal offering is like that of a guilt offering. Therefore, if one removed a handful from it not for its own sake, it is valid, like a guilt offering that was slaughtered not for its own sake.
Rabbi Shimon adds: And a voluntary meal offering is like a guilt offering in another aspect as well: Just as a guilt offering is valid but it does not effect acceptance, i.e., it does not satisfy the owner’s obligation, so too, a voluntary meal offering is valid but it does not effect acceptance. Rabbi Shimon here apparently contradicts his ruling that all meal offerings from which a handful was removed not for their sake satisfy the obligation of the owner.” (Sefaria.org translation)
The contradiction is easily summarized. In baraita #1 the minkha offering not for its sake is kosher and the owners get a check mark for fulfilling their obligation. In baraita #2 the minkha offering not for its sake is kosher and the owners don’t get a check mark for fulfilling their obligation.
Three different sages try to resolve this contradiction beginning on daf 2 and continuing on today’s daf 3.
Rabba’s solution:
“Rabba said in resolution of this contradiction: This is not
difficult. Here, where Rabbi Shimon says that the meal offering satisfies
the owner’s obligation, he is referring to a change of sanctity, i.e.,
it was sacrificed for the sake of another type of meal offering, whereas there,
where he says that it does not fulfill the owner’s obligation, he is referring to
a change of owner, e.g., the meal offering of Reuven was sacrificed for the
sake of Shimon.” (Sefaria.org translation)
Rava’s solution:
“The Gemara cites another resolution of the apparent contradiction between the
two baraitot that report conflicting opinions of Rabbi Shimon. Rava
said: It is not difficult. Here, where Rabbi Shimon says that a meal
offering that was sacrificed not for its own sake fulfills the owner’s
obligation, he is referring to a case where one removes a handful from a
meal offering for the sake of a meal offering. There, where he says that it
does not fulfill the owner’s obligation, he is referring to a case where one
removes a handful from a meal offering for the sake of a slaughtered
offering.” (Sefaria.org translation)
Rav Ashi’s
solution: “The Gemara cites a third resolution of the apparent contradiction
between the two baraitot that report conflicting opinions of Rabbi
Shimon. Rav Ashi said that it is not difficult. Here, where Rabbi
Shimon says that the meal offering is fit and fulfills the obligation of the
owner, he is referring to a case where one states that he is removing
a handful from a pan meal offering for the sake of a deep pan, i.e.,
he mentions only the vessel and not the offering. There, where it does
not fulfill the owner’s obligation, he states that he is removing a
handful from a pan meal offering for the sake of a deep-pan meal
offering.
“Rav Ashi elaborates: When one bringing a pan meal offering states that he is removing a handful from a pan meal offering for the sake of a deep pan, he has intent only with regard to the type of vessel, and intention with regard to the type of vessel does not disqualify offerings, as he is not sacrificing the vessel, and therefore the owner’s obligation is fulfilled. By contrast, when he states that he is removing a handful from a pan meal offering for the sake of a deep-pan meal offering, he has intent with regard to the type of meal offering, which improper intention does disqualify. Consequently, the owner’s obligation is not fulfilled.” (Sefaria.org translation)
The Gemara concludes why each Sage didn’t agree with the other two.
“§ Three
resolutions have been suggested for the apparent contradiction between the
statements of Rabbi Shimon in two baraitot concerning whether or not a
meal offering whose handful was removed not for its own sake fulfills the
obligation of its owner. Rabba’s answer was that there is a difference between
intent for another meal offering, in which case the owner fulfills his
obligation, as the intent is recognizably improper, and intent for someone
else, which is not recognizably improper. The Gemara comments: All the
other Sages, i.e., Rava and Rav Ashi, do not say as Rabba did in
resolving the contradiction, as they do not accept his reasoning, claiming that
on the contrary, the Merciful One disqualifies recognizably false intent.
“The Gemara continues: Rava resolved the contradiction by saying that a meal offering from which a handful was removed for the sake of another meal offering effects acceptance for the owner, as the verse states: “And this is the law of the meal offering” (Leviticus 6:7), indicating that there is one law for all meal offerings, whereas a meal offering from which a handful was removed for the sake of an animal offering does not effect acceptance. Rabba and Rav Ashi do not say as Rava did in resolving the contradiction, as the verse that states: “And this is the law of the meal offering,” does not indicate to them that there should be one law for all meal offerings.
“The Gemara continues: Rav Ashi resolved the contradiction by saying that when one removes the handful from a meal offering for the sake of a vessel the meal offering effects acceptance for the owner, as intent concerning the vessel itself is inconsequential, whereas when one removes the handful for the sake of another meal offering, the meal offering does not fulfill the owner’s obligation. Rabba and Rava did not say as Rav Ashi did in resolving the contradiction because of the difficulty posed by Rav Aḥa, son of Rava, from a case where one removes the handful of a dry meal offering for the sake of a mixed one. Rabbi Shimon holds that such a meal offering fulfills the owner’s obligation even though his intent concerns the meal offering itself, not the vessel.
“The Gemara notes: The matter
that is obvious to Rabba in one way, i.e., that with regard to meal
offerings recognizably false intention is disregarded, but when the false
intention is not recognizable the offering does not fulfill the owner’s
obligation, and that is obvious to Rava in the other way, i.e.,
that in cases of recognizably false intention the offering should not fulfill
the owner’s obligation, is a dilemma for Rav Hoshaya. ” (Sefaria.org
translation)
Today we begin massekhet Menakhot with daf 2 which deals with the flour or meal offering (minkha) that is described in the second chapter of Leviticus.
“When
a person presents an offering of meal to YHVH: The offering shall be of choice
flour; the offerer shall pour oil upon it, lay frankincense on it, and present
it to Aaron’s sons, the priests. The priest shall scoop out of it a handful of
its choice flour and oil, as well as all of its frankincense; and this token
portion he shall turn into smoke on the altar, as an offering by fire, of
pleasing odor to YHVH. And the remainder of the meal offering shall be for
Aaron and his sons, a most holy portion from YHVH’s offerings by fire. When you
present an offering of meal baked in the oven, [it shall be of] choice flour:
unleavened cakes with oil mixed in, or unleavened wafers spread with oil. If
your offering is a meal offering on a griddle, it shall be of choice flour with
oil mixed in, unleavened. Break it into bits and pour oil on it; it is a meal
offering. If your offering is a meal
offering in a pan, it shall be made of choice flour in oil. When you present to
YHVH a meal offering that is made in any of these ways, it shall be brought to
the priest who shall take it up to the altar. The priest shall remove the token
portion from the meal offering and turn it into smoke on the altar as an
offering by fire, of pleasing odor to YHVH. And the remainder of the meal
offering shall be for Aaron and his sons, a most holy portion from YHVH’s offerings
by fire. No meal offering that you offer to YHVH shall be made with leaven, for
no leaven or honey may be turned into smoke as an offering by fire to YHVH.”
(Leviticus 2:1-11)
Massekhet Menakhot is a continuation of massekhet Zevakhim in terms of what is offered on the altar. In massekhet Zevakhim the sacrifice is an animal while in massekhet Menakhot the offering is a meal offering. Many of the laws concerning animal sacrifices also apply to meal offerings. Just as there are four important stages of an animal sacrifice, there are four parallel important stages of a meal offering. These four stages are: 1, קְמִיצָה (kemitza )- taking a fistful of flour; 2, נְתִינָה בְכָלִי שָרֵת - placing the flour in a second vessel to sanctify it; 3, הולָכָה - bringing it to the altar; 4, הַקְטָרָה- burning the offering on the altar.
The Mishnah begins “When one brings a meal offering to the Temple, the priest
removes a handful from it, places the handful into a service vessel, conveys it
to the altar, and burns it. At that point, the remainder is permitted to the
priests for consumption and the owner has fulfilled his obligation. In this
context, the mishna teaches: All the meal offerings from which a
handful was removed not for their sake but for the sake of another meal
offering are fit for sacrifice. But these offerings did not
satisfy the obligation of the owner, who must therefore bring another
offering. This is the halakha with regard to all meal offerings except
for the meal offering of a sinner and the meal offering of jealousy, which
is brought as part of the rite of a woman suspected by her husband of having
been unfaithful [sota]. In those cases, if the priest removed the
handful not for its own sake, the offering is disqualified.”
(Sefaria.org translation)
Tosefot ד"ה כׇּל הַמְנָחוֹת שֶנִקְמְצוּ שֶלֹא לִשְמָן כְשֵירוֹת comments even though the Mishnah only mentions the kemitza, the law is the same for the other three important stages of the minkha sacrifice. They add that waving the minkha offering (תְנוּפָה) and bringing the first bowl containing the flour and touching it to the altar (הַרְגָשָה) do not invalidate the minkha even when the priests having a invalidating type of thought.
Just like with animal sacrifices, there are two
different types of changes that effect the validity of a minkha offering. These two changes are: 1, שִׁינּוּי קֹדֶשׁ-
changing one sub-category of a minkha
offering to another; 2, שִינּוּי בְעָלִים -changing for whom the minkha is being offered. Tosefot ד"ה שֶלֹא לִשְמָן
also
comments that even though the Mishnah deals with changing one subcategory of a minkha offering to another, the same is
true when it comes to changing for whom the minkha
is being offered.