Torah Reading:
Lech-Lecha: Genesis 12:1 - 17:27
Isaiah 40:27 - 41:16
Lech-Lecha: Genesis 12:1 Now Adonai said to Avram, “Get yourself out of your country, away from your kinsmen and away from your father’s house, and go to the land that I will show you. 2 I will make of you a great nation, I will bless you, and I will make your name great; and you are to be a blessing. 3 I will bless those who bless you, but I will curse anyone who curses you; and by you all the families of the earth will be blessed.”
4 So Avram went, as Adonai had said to him, and Lot went with him. Avram was 75 years old when he left Haran. 5 Avram took his wife Sarai, his brother’s son Lot, and all their possessions which they had accumulated, as well as the people they had acquired in Haran; then they set out for the land of Kena‘an and entered the land of Kena‘an.
6 Avram passed through the land to the place called Sh’khem, to the oak of Moreh. The Kena‘ani were then in the land. 7 Adonai appeared to Avram and said, “To your descendants I will give this land.” So he built an altar there to Adonai, who had appeared to him.
8 He left that place, went to the hill east of Beit-El and pitched his tent. With Beit-El to the west and ‘Ai to the east, he built an altar there and called on the name of Adonai. 9 Then Avram traveled on, continuing toward the Negev. 10 But there was a famine in the land, so Avram went down into Egypt to stay there, because the famine in the land was severe.
11 When he came close to Egypt and was about to enter, he said to Sarai his wife, “Here now, I know that you are a good-looking woman; 12 so that when the Egyptians see you, they will say, ‘This is his wife,’ and kill me but keep you alive. 13 Please say that you are my sister, so that it will go well with me for your sake, and so that I will stay alive because of you.”
(ii) 14 When Avram entered Egypt, the Egyptians did notice that the woman was very beautiful. 15 Pharaoh’s princes saw her and commended her to Pharaoh, so the woman was taken into Pharaoh’s house. 16 He treated Avram well for her sake, giving him sheep, cattle, male and female donkeys, male and female slaves, and camels.
17 But Adonai inflicted great plagues on Pharaoh and his household because of Sarai Avram’s wife. 18 Pharaoh called Avram and said, “What is this that you have done to me? Why didn’t you tell me that she was your wife? 19 Why did you say, ‘She is my sister,’ so that I took her to be my own wife? Now therefore, here is your wife! Take her, and go away!” 20 So Pharaoh gave orders concerning him to his men, and they sent him on his way with his wife and everything he had.
13:1 Avram went up from Egypt — he, his wife and everything he had, and Lot with him — into the Negev. 2 Avram became wealthy, with much cattle, silver and gold. 3 As he went on his travels from the Negev, he came to Beit-El, to the place where his tent had been at the beginning, between Beit-El and ‘Ai, 4 where he had first built the altar; and there Avram called on the name of Adonai.
(iii) 5 Lot, who was traveling with Avram, also had flocks, herds and tents. 6 But the land could not support their living together, because their possessions were too great for them to remain together. 7 Moreover, quarreling arose between Avram’s and Lot’s herdsmen. The Kena‘ani and the P’rizi were then living in the land. 8 Avram said to Lot, “Please, let’s not have quarreling between me and you, or between my herdsmen and yours, since we’re kinsmen. 9 Isn’t the whole land there in front of you? Please separate yourself from me — if you go to the left, I will go to the right; if you go to the right, I will go to the left.” 10 Lot looked up and saw that the whole plain of the Yarden was well watered everywhere, before Adonai destroyed S’dom and ‘Amora, like the garden of Adonai, like the land of Egypt in the direction of Tzo‘ar. 11 So Lot chose all the plain of the Yarden for himself, and Lot traveled eastward; thus they separated themselves from each other. 12 Avram lived in the land of Kena‘an; and Lot lived in the cities of the plain, setting up his tent near S’dom. 13 Now the men of S’dom were evil, committing great sins against Adonai.
14 Adonai said to Avram, after Lot had moved away from him, “Look all around you from where you are, to the north, the south, the east and the west. 15 All the land you see I will give to you and your descendants forever, 16 and I will make your descendants as numerous as the specks of dust on the earth — so that if a person can count the specks of dust on the earth, then your descendants can be counted. 17 Get up and walk through the length and breadth of the land, because I will give it to you.” 18 Avram moved his tent and came to live by the oaks of Mamre, which are in Hevron. There he built an altar to Adonai.
14:1 (iv) When Amrafel was king of Shin‘ar, Aryokh king of Elasar, K’dorla‘omer king of ‘Elam and Tid‘al king of Goyim; 2 they made war together against Bera king of S’dom and against Birsha king of ‘Amora, Shin’av king of Admah, Shem’ever king of Tzvoyim, and the king of Bela (which is the same as Tzo‘ar). 3 All the latter kings joined forces in the Siddim Valley, where the Dead Sea is. 4 They had served K’dorla‘omer twelve years, but in the thirteenth year they rebelled.
5 In the fourteenth year K’dorla‘omer and the kings with him came and defeated the Refa’im in ‘Asht’rot-Karnayim, the Zuzim in Ham, the Eimim in Shaveh-Kiryatayim 6 and the Hori at Se‘ir, their mountain, all the way to Eil-Pa’ran by the desert. 7 Next they turned back, came to ‘Ein-Mishpat (which is the same as Kadesh), and defeated all the country of the ‘Amaleki, and also the Emori, who lived in Hatzatzon-Tamar. 8 Then the kings of S’dom, ‘Amora, Admah, Tzvoyim and Bela (that is, Tzo‘ar) came out and arrayed themselves for battle in the Siddim Valley 9 against K’dorla‘omer king of ‘Elam, Tid‘al king of Goyim, Amrafel king of Admah and Aryokh king of Elasar, four kings against the five.
10 Now the Siddim Valley was full of clay pits; and when the kings of S’dom and ‘Amora fled, some fell into them; while the rest fled to the hills. 11 The victors took all the possessions of S’dom and ‘Amora and all their food supply; then they left. 12 But as they left, they took Lot, Avram’s brother’s son, and his possessions; since he was living in S’dom. 13 Someone who had escaped came and told Avram the Hebrew, who was living by the oaks of Mamre the Emori, brother of Eshkol and brother of ‘Aner; all of them allies of Avram. 14 When Avram heard that his nephew had been taken captive, he led out his trained men, who had been born in his house, 318 of them, and went in pursuit as far as Dan. 15 During the night he and his servants divided his forces against them, then attacked and pursued them all the way to Hovah, north of Dammesek. 16 He recovered all the goods and brought back his nephew Lot with his goods, together with the women and the other people. 17 After his return from slaughtering K’dorla‘omer and the kings with him, the king of S’dom went out to meet him in the Shaveh Valley, also known as the King’s Valley.
18 Malki-Tzedek king of Shalem brought out bread and wine. He was cohen of El ‘Elyon [God Most High], 19 so he blessed him with these words:
“Blessed be Avram by El ‘Elyon,
maker of heaven of earth.
20 and blessed be El ‘Elyon,
who handed your enemies over to you.”
Avram gave him a tenth of everything.
(v) 21 The king of S’dom said to Avram, “Give me the people, and keep the goods for yourself.” 22 But Avram answered the king of S’dom, “I have raised my hand in an oath to Adonai, El ‘Elyon, maker of heaven and earth, 23 that I will not take so much as a thread or a sandal thong of anything that is yours; so that you won’t be able to say, ‘I made Avram rich.’ 24 I will take only what my troops have eaten and the share of the spoil belonging to the men who came with me — ‘Aner, Eshkol and Mamre; let them have their share.”
15:1 Some time later the word of Adonai came to Avram in a vision: “Don’t be afraid, Avram. I am your protector; your reward will be very great.” 2 Avram replied, “Adonai, God, what good will your gifts be to me if I continue childless; and Eli‘ezer from Dammesek inherits my possessions? 3 You haven’t given me a child,” Avram continued, “so someone born in my house will be my heir.” 4 But the word of Adonai came to him: “This man will not be your heir. No, your heir will be a child from your own body.” 5 Then he brought him outside and said, “Look up at the sky, and count the stars — if you can count them! Your descendants will be that many!” 6 He believed in Adonai, and he credited it to him as righteousness.
(vi) 7 Then he said to him, “I am Adonai, who brought you out from Ur-Kasdim to give you this land as your possession.” 8 He replied, “Adonai, God, how am I to know that I will possess it?” 9 He answered him, “Bring me a three-year-old cow, a three-year-old female goat, a three-year-old ram, a dove and a young pigeon.” 10 He brought him all these, cut the animals in two and placed the pieces opposite each other; but he didn’t cut the birds in half. 11 Birds of prey swooped down on the carcasses, but Avram drove them away.
12 As the sun was about to set, a deep sleep fell on Avram; horror and great darkness came over him. 13 Adonai said to Avram, “Know this for certain: your descendants will be foreigners in a land that is not theirs. They will be slaves and held in oppression there four hundred years. 14 But I will also judge that nation, the one that makes them slaves. Afterwards, they will leave with many possessions. 15 As for you, you will join your ancestors in peace and be buried at a good old age. 16 Only in the fourth generation will your descendants come back here, because only then will the Emori be ripe for punishment.”
17 After the sun had set and there was thick darkness, a smoking fire pot and a flaming torch appeared, which passed between these animal parts. 18 That day Adonai made a covenant with Avram: “I have given this land to your descendants — from the Vadi of Egypt to the great river, the Euphrates River — 19 the territory of the Keni, the K’nizi, the Kadmoni, 20 the Hitti, the P’rizi, the Refa’im, 21 the Emori, the Kena‘ani, the Girgashi and the Y’vusi.”
16:1 Now Sarai Avram’s wife had not borne him a child. But she had an Egyptian slave-girl named Hagar; 2 so Sarai said to Avram, “Here now, Adonai has kept me from having children; so go in and sleep with my slave-girl. Maybe I’ll be able to have children through her.” Avram listened to what Sarai said.
3 It was after Avram had lived ten years in the land of Kena‘an that Sarai Avram’s wife took Hagar the Egyptian, her slave-girl, and gave her to Avram her husband to be his wife. 4 Avram had sexual relations with Hagar, and she conceived. But when she became aware that she was pregnant, she looked on her mistress with contempt. 5 Sarai said to Avram, “This outrage being done to me is your fault! True, I gave my slave-girl to you to sleep with; but when she saw that she was pregnant, she began holding me in contempt. May Adonai decide who is right — I or you!” 6 However, Avram answered Sarai, “Look, she’s your slave-girl. Deal with her as you think fit.” Then Sarai treated her so harshly that she ran away from her.
7 The angel of Adonai found her by a spring in the desert, the spring on the road to Shur, 8 and said, “Hagar! Sarai’s slave-girl! Where have you come from, and where are you going?” She answered, “I’m running away from my mistress Sarai.” 9 The angel of Adonai said to her, “Go back to your mistress, and submit to her authority.” 10 The angel of Adonai said to her, “I will greatly increase your descendants; there will be so many that it will be impossible to count them.” 11 The angel of Adonai said to her, “Look, you are pregnant, and you will give birth to a son. You are to call him Yishma‘el [God pays attention] because Adonai has paid attention to your misery. 12 He will be a wild donkey of a man, with his hand against everyone and everyone’s hand against him, living his life at odds with all his kinsmen.”
13 So she named Adonai who had spoken with her El Ro’i [God of seeing], because she said, “Have I really seen the One who sees me [and stayed alive]?” 14 This is why the well has been called Be’er-Lachai-Ro’i [well of the one who lives and sees]; it lies between Kadesh and Bered.
15 Hagar bore Avram a son, and Avram called the son whom Hagar had borne Yishma‘el. 16 Avram was 86 years old when Hagar bore Yishma‘el to Avram.
17:1 When Avram was 99 years old Adonai appeared to Avram and said to him, “I am El Shaddai [God Almighty]. Walk in my presence and be pure-hearted. 2 I will make my covenant between me and you, and I will increase your numbers greatly.” 3 Avram fell on his face, and God continued speaking with him: 4 “As for me, this is my covenant with you: you will be the father of many nations. 5 Your name will no longer be Avram [exalted father], but your name will be Avraham [father of many], because I have made you the father of many nations. 6 I will cause you to be very fruitful. I will make nations of you, kings will descend from you.
(vii) 7 “I am establishing my covenant between me and you, along with your descendants after you, generation after generation, as an everlasting covenant, to be God for you and for your descendants after you. 8 I will give you and your descendants after you the land in which you are now foreigners, all the land of Kena‘an, as a permanent possession; and I will be their God.”
9 God said to Avraham, “As for you, you are to keep my covenant, you and your descendants after you, generation after generation. 10 Here is my covenant, which you are to keep, between me and you, along with your descendants after you: every male among you is to be circumcised. 11 You are to be circumcised in the flesh of your foreskin; this will be the sign of the covenant between me and you. 12 Generation after generation, every male among you who is eight days old is to be circumcised, including slaves born within your household and those bought from a foreigner not descended from you. 13 The slave born in your house and the person bought with your money must be circumcised; thus my covenant will be in your flesh as an everlasting covenant. 14 Any uncircumcised male who will not let himself be circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin — that person will be cut off from his people, because he has broken my covenant.”
15 God said to Avraham, “As for Sarai your wife, you are not to call her Sarai [mockery]; her name is to be Sarah [princess]. 16 I will bless her; moreover, I will give you a son by her. Truly I will bless her: she will be a mother of nations; kings of peoples will come from her.” 17 At this Avraham fell on his face and laughed — he thought to himself, “Will a child be born to a man a hundred years old? Will Sarah give birth at ninety?” 18 Avraham said to God, “If only Yishma‘el could live in your presence!” 19 God answered, “No, but Sarah your wife will bear you a son, and you are to call him Yitz’chak [laughter]. I will establish my covenant with him as an everlasting covenant for his descendants after him. 20 But as for Yishma‘el, I have heard you. I have blessed him. I will make him fruitful and give him many descendants. He will father twelve princes, and I will make him a great nation. 21 But I will establish my covenant with Yitz’chak, whom Sarah will bear to you at this time next year.” 22 With that, God finished speaking with Avraham and went up from him.
23 Avraham took Yishma‘el his son, all the slaves born in his house and all who had been bought with his money, every male among the people in Avraham’s household, and circumcised the flesh of their foreskin that very day, just as God had said to him.
(Maftir) 24 Avraham was ninety-nine years old when he was circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin, 25 and Yishma‘el his son was thirteen years old when he was circumcised in the flesh of his foreskin. 26 Avraham and Yishma‘el his son were circumcised on the same day; 27 and all the men in his household, both slaves born in his house and those bought with money from a foreigner, were circumcised with him.
Isaiah 40:27 Why do you complain, Ya‘akov;
why do you say, Isra’el,
“My way is hidden from Adonai,
my rights are ignored by my God”?
28 Haven’t you known, haven’t you heard
that the everlasting God, Adonai,
the Creator of the ends of the earth,
does not grow tired or weary?
His understanding cannot be fathomed.
29 He invigorates the exhausted,
he gives strength to the powerless.
30 Young men may grow tired and weary,
even the fittest may stumble and fall;
31 but those who hope in Adonai will renew their strength,
they will soar aloft as with eagles’ wings;
when they are running they won’t grow weary,
when they are walking they won’t get tired.
41:1 “Keep silence before me, coastlands!
Let the peoples replenish their strength!
Let them approach; then let them speak.
Let us assemble for judgment.”
2 Who has raised from the east one who is just
and called him to be in his service?
He hands nations over to him
and subjects kings to him;
his sword reduces them to dust,
his bow to driven straw.
3 He pursues them, passing on unscathed,
hardly touching the path with his feet.
4 Whose work is this? Who has brought it about?
He who called the generations from the beginning,
“I, Adonai, am the first;
and I am the same with those who are last.”
5 The coastlands have seen and became afraid.
The ends of the earth have trembled.
They have approached, and now they have come.
6 Every one helps his fellow workman,
everyone says to his brother, “Be strong!”
7 The woodworker encourages the goldsmith,
the polisher encourages the hammerer;
he says of the soldering, “Yes, that’s good,”
then puts nails in [the idol] to keep it from moving.
8 “But you, Isra’el, my servant;
Ya‘akov, whom I have chosen,
descendants of Avraham my friend,
9 I have taken you from the ends of the earth,
summoned you from its most distant parts
and said to you, ‘You are my servant’ —
I have chosen you, not rejected you.
10 Don’t be afraid, for I am with you;
don’t be distressed, for I am your God.
I give you strength, I give you help,
I support you with my victorious right hand.
11 All those who were angry with you
will be disgraced, put to shame;
those who fought against you
will be destroyed, brought to nothing.
12 You will seek them but not find them,
those who contended with you;
yes, those who made war with you
will be brought to nothing, nothing at all.
13 For I, Adonai, your God,
say to you, as I hold your right hand,
‘Have no fear; I will help you.
14 Have no fear, Ya‘akov, you worm,
you men of Isra’el!’
I will help you,” says Adonai;
“Your redeemer is the Holy One of Isra’el.
15 “I will make you into a threshing-sledge,
new, with sharp, pointed teeth,
to thresh the mountains and crush them to dust,
to reduce the hills to chaff.
16 As you fan them, the wind will carry them off,
and the whirlwind will scatter them.
Then you will rejoice in Adonai,
you will glory in the Holy One of Isra’el.
Daily Torah Study:
Chumash: Lech-Lecha, 7th Portion Genesis 17:7-17:27 with Rashi
• English / Hebrew Linear Translation
• Video Class
• Daily Wisdom (short insight)
Genesis Chapter 17
7And I will establish My covenant between Me and between you and between your seed after you throughout their generations as an everlasting covenant, to be to you for a God and to your seed after you. זוַֽהֲקִֽמֹתִ֨י אֶת־בְּרִיתִ֜י בֵּינִ֣י וּבֵינֶ֗ךָ וּבֵ֨ין זַרְעֲךָ֧ אַֽחֲרֶ֛יךָ לְדֹֽרֹתָ֖ם לִבְרִ֣ית עוֹלָ֑ם לִֽהְי֤וֹת לְךָ֙ לֵֽאלֹהִ֔ים וּלְזַרְעֲךָ֖ אַֽחֲרֶֽיךָ:
And I will establish My covenant: And what is that covenant? To be to you for a God.
והקמותי את בריתי: ומה הוא הברית, להיות לך לא-להים:
8And I will give you and your seed after you the land of your sojournings, the entire land of Canaan for an everlasting possession, and I will be to them for a God." חוְנָֽתַתִּ֣י לְ֠ךָ֠ וּלְזַרְעֲךָ֨ אַֽחֲרֶ֜יךָ אֵ֣ת | אֶ֣רֶץ מְגֻרֶ֗יךָ אֵ֚ת כָּל־אֶ֣רֶץ כְּנַ֔עַן לַֽאֲחֻזַּ֖ת עוֹלָ֑ם וְהָיִ֥יתִי לָהֶ֖ם לֵֽאלֹהִֽים:
for an everlasting possession: And there I will be to you for a God (Gen. Rabbah 46:9), but if one dwells outside the Holy Land, it is as though he has no God (Keth. 110b).
לאחוזת עולם: ושם אהיה להם לא-להים, אבל הדר בחוצה לארץ דומה כמי שאין לו אלוה:
9And God said to Abraham, "And you shall keep My covenant, you and your seed after you throughout their generations. טוַיֹּ֤אמֶר אֱלֹהִים֙ אֶל־אַבְרָהָ֔ם וְאַתָּ֖ה אֶת־בְּרִיתִ֣י תִשְׁמֹ֑ר אַתָּ֛ה וְזַרְעֲךָ֥ אַֽחֲרֶ֖יךָ לְדֹֽרֹתָֽם:
And you: Heb. וְאַתָּה. This “vav” connects [this verse] to the preceding matter. “As for Me, behold My covenant is with you,” and you must be careful to observe it. Now what does its observance entail?“This is My covenant, which you shall observe…that every male among you be circumcised.”
ואתה: וא"ו זו מוסיף על ענין ראשון אני הנה בריתי אתך, ואתה הוי זהיר לשמרו, ומה היא שמירתו, (פסוק י) זאת בריתי אשר תשמרו המול לכם וגו':
10This is My covenant, which you shall observe between Me and between you and between your seed after you, that every male among you be circumcised. יזֹ֣את בְּרִיתִ֞י אֲשֶׁ֣ר תִּשְׁמְר֗וּ בֵּינִי֙ וּבֵ֣ינֵיכֶ֔ם וּבֵ֥ין זַרְעֲךָ֖ אַֽחֲרֶ֑יךָ הִמּ֥וֹל לָכֶ֖ם כָּל־זָכָֽר:
between Me and you: those living now.
ביני וביניכם וגו': אותם של עכשיו:
and between your seed: who are destined to be born.
ובין זרעך אחריך: העתידין להוולד:
be circumcised: Heb. הִמּוֹל, is like לְהִמּוֹל, to circumcise [the infinitive], as you might say עֲשוֹת in place of לַעֲשוֹת, to do.
המול: כמו להמול כמו שאתה אומר עשות, כמו לעשות:
11And you shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskin, and it shall be as the sign of a covenant between Me and between you. יאוּנְמַלְתֶּ֕ם אֵ֖ת בְּשַׂ֣ר עָרְלַתְכֶ֑ם וְהָיָה֙ לְא֣וֹת בְּרִ֔ית בֵּינִ֖י וּבֵֽינֵיכֶֽם:
And you shall circumcise: וּנְמַלְתֶּם is like וּמַלְתֶּם, and the “nun” is superfluous, a radical that sometimes appears in it, like the“nun” of נוֹשֵׁךְ and the “nun” of נוֹשֵׂא. וּנְמַלְתֶּם has the same form as וּנְשָׂאתֶם, (i.e., the Kal form). But יִמּוֹל is in the passive form (the Nifal), like יֵעָשֶׂה (it will be done), יֵאָכֵל (it will be eaten).
ונמלתם: כמו ומלתם והנו"ן בו יתירה ליסוד הנופל בו לפרקים, כגון נ' של נושך ונ' של נושא. ונמלתם, כמו ונשאתם, אבל ימול לשון יפעל כמו יעשה, יאכל:
12And at the age of eight days, every male shall be circumcised to you throughout your generations, one that is born in the house, or one that is purchased with money, from any foreigner, who is not of your seed. יבוּבֶן־שְׁמֹנַ֣ת יָמִ֗ים יִמּ֥וֹל לָכֶ֛ם כָּל־זָכָ֖ר לְדֹרֹֽתֵיכֶ֑ם יְלִ֣יד בָּ֔יִת וּמִקְנַת־כֶּ֨סֶף֙ מִכֹּ֣ל בֶּן־נֵכָ֔ר אֲשֶׁ֛ר לֹ֥א מִזַּרְעֲךָ֖ הֽוּא:
one that is born in the house: whom the maidservant bore in the house.
יליד בית: שילדתו השפחה בבית:
one that is purchased with money: whom he bought after he was born.
ומקנת כסף: שקנאו משנולד:
13Those born in the house and those purchased for money shall be circumcised, and My covenant shall be in your flesh as an everlasting covenant. יגהִמּ֧וֹל | יִמּ֛וֹל יְלִ֥יד בֵּֽיתְךָ֖ וּמִקְנַ֣ת כַּסְפֶּ֑ךָ וְהָֽיְתָ֧ה בְרִיתִ֛י בִּבְשַׂרְכֶ֖ם לִבְרִ֥ית עוֹלָֽם:
Those born in the house… shall be circumcised: Here Scripture repeated it [the commandment to circumcise a slave born in the house;] but did not state [that it is to be] on the eighth day, to teach you that there is a slave born in the house who is circumcised after eight days [other editions: at the age of one day], as is delineated in Tractate Shabbath (135b).
המול ימול יליד ביתך: כאן כפל עליו ולא אמר לשמונה ימים, ללמדך שיש יליד בית נמול לאחר שמנה ימים, כמו שמפורש במסכת שבת (דף קלה ב):
14And an uncircumcised male, who will not circumcise the flesh of his foreskin-that soul will be cut off from its people; he has broken My covenant." ידוְעָרֵ֣ל | זָכָ֗ר אֲשֶׁ֤ר לֹֽא־יִמּוֹל֙ אֶת־בְּשַׂ֣ר עָרְלָת֔וֹ וְנִכְרְתָ֛ה הַנֶּ֥פֶשׁ הַהִ֖וא מֵֽעַמֶּ֑יהָ אֶת־בְּרִיתִ֖י הֵפַֽר:
And an uncircumcised male: Here Scripture teaches that circumcision is in that place that distinguishes between male and female.
וערל זכר: כאן למד שהמילה באותו מקום שהוא ניכר בין זכר לנקבה:
who will not circumcise: When he reaches the age when he becomes liable for punishment, then [his soul] will be cut off (Shab. 133b), but his father [who does not circumcise him] is not punishable by “kareth” (spiritual excision), but is guilty of transgressing a positive commandment (Yeb. 70b).
אשר לא ימול: משיגיע לכלל עונשין ונכרתה, אבל אביו אין ענוש עליו כרת אבל עובר בעשה:
that soul will be cut off: He goes childless (Yeb. 55a) and dies prematurely (Moed Katan 28a).
ונכרתה הנפש: הולך ערירי ומת קודם זמנו:
15And God said to Abraham, "Your wife Sarai-you shall not call her name Sarai, for Sarah is her name. טווַיֹּ֤אמֶר אֱלֹהִים֙ אֶל־אַבְרָהָ֔ם שָׂרַ֣י אִשְׁתְּךָ֔ לֹֽא־תִקְרָ֥א אֶת־שְׁמָ֖הּ שָׂרָ֑י כִּ֥י שָׂרָ֖ה שְׁמָֽהּ:
you shall not call her name Sarai: which means “my princess,” for me, but not for others. But Sarah, in an unqualified sense, shall be her name, that she will be a princess over all. — [from Ber. 13a]
לא תקרא את שמה שרי: דמשמע שרי לי ולא לאחרים כי שרה סתם שמה, שתהא שרה על כל:
16And I will bless her, and I will give you a son from her, and I will bless her, and she will become [a mother of] nations; kings of nations will be from her. " טזוּבֵֽרַכְתִּ֣י אֹתָ֔הּ וְגַ֨ם נָתַ֧תִּי מִמֶּ֛נָּה לְךָ֖ בֵּ֑ן וּבֵֽרַכְתִּ֨יהָ֙ וְהָֽיְתָ֣ה לְגוֹיִ֔ם מַלְכֵ֥י עַמִּ֖ים מִמֶּ֥נָּה יִֽהְיֽוּ:
And I will bless her: And what is the blessing? That she returned to her youth, as it is said (below 18:12): “My skin has become smooth.” - [from B.M. 87a]
וברכתי אותה: ומה הוא הברכה, שחזרה לנערותה, שנאמר (לקמן יח יב) אחרי בלותי היתה לי עדנה:
and I will bless her: with breast feeding, when she required it, on the day of Isaac’s feast, for people were murmuring against them, that they had brought a foundling from the street and were saying, “He is our son.” So each one brought her child with her, but not her wet nurse, and she (Sarah) nursed them all. That is what is said (below 21:7): “Sarah has nursed children.” Gen. Rabbah (53:9) alludes slightly to this. — [from B.M. 87a]
וברכתיה: בהנקת שדים, כשנצרכה לכך ביום משתה של יצחק, שהיו מרננים עליהם שהביאו אסופי מן השוק ואומרים בננו הוא, והביאה כל אחת בנה עמה ומניקתה לא הביאה, והיא היניקה את כולם, הוא שנאמר (כא ז) היניקה בנים שרה. בראשית רבה (נג ט) רמזו במקצת:
17And Abraham fell on his face and rejoiced, and he said to himself, "Will [a child] be born to one who is a hundred years old, and will Sarah, who is ninety years old, give birth?" יזוַיִּפֹּ֧ל אַבְרָהָ֛ם עַל־פָּנָ֖יו וַיִּצְחָ֑ק וַיֹּ֣אמֶר בְּלִבּ֗וֹ הַלְּבֶ֤ן מֵאָֽה־שָׁנָה֙ יִוָּלֵ֔ד וְאִ֨ם־שָׂרָ֔ה הֲבַת־תִּשְׁעִ֥ים שָׁנָ֖ה תֵּלֵֽד:
And Abraham fell on his face and rejoiced: Heb. וַיִּצְחָק. Onkelos renders this as an expression of joy, וַחֲדִי “and he rejoiced,” but the one [וַתִּצְחָק] in the case of Sarah (below 18:12) [he renders] as an expression of laughter. You learn that Abraham believed and rejoiced, but Sarah did not believe and ridiculed, and for this reason, the Holy One, blessed be He, was angry with Sarah, but was not angry with Abraham.
ויפל אברהם על פניו ויצחק: זה תירגם אנקלוס וחדי, לשון שמחה, ושל שרה לשון מחוך. למדת שאברהם האמין ושמח, ושרה לא האמינה ולגלגה. וזהו שהקפיד הקב"ה על שרה ולא הקפיד על אברהם:
Will [a child] be born to on, etc.: There are questions which are positive assertions, like (I Sam. 2:27): הֲנִגְלֹה נִגְלֵיתִי, “Did I appear?” [meaning: “of course I appeared!”]; (II Sam. 15:27): הֲרֹאֶה אַתָּה, “Do you see?” [meaning: “of course you see!”] This too is a positive assertion, and so did he say to himself, “Was such kindness done to anyone else, that the Holy One, blessed be He, is doing for me?”
הלבן: יש תמיהות שהן קיימות כמו (ש"א ב כז) הנגלה נגליתי, (ש"ב טו כז) הרואה אתה, אף זו היא קיימת, וכך אמר בלבו הנעשה חסד זה לאחר מה שהקב"ה עושה לי:
and will Sarah, who is ninety years old: Shall she be worthy of giving birth? Now although the first generations begot children at the age of five hundred, in Abraham’s time, the years were already lessened, and weakness had come to the world. Go out and learn this from the ten generations from Noah to Abraham, who hastened to beget children at the age of sixty and seventy.
ואם שרה הבת תשעים שנה: היתה כדאי לילד. ואף על פי שדורות הראשונים היו מולידין בני חמש מאות שנה, בימי אברהם נתמעטו השנים כבר ובא תשות כח לעולם, וצא ולמד מעשרה דורות שמנח ועד אברהם שמיהרו תולדותיהן בני ששים ובני שבעים:
18And Abraham said to God, "If only Ishmael will live before You!" יחוַיֹּ֥אמֶר אַבְרָהָ֖ם אֶל־הָֽאֱלֹהִ֑ים ל֥וּ יִשְׁמָעֵ֖אל יִֽחְיֶ֥ה לְפָנֶֽיךָ:
If only Ishmael will live: If only Ishmael will live! I do not deserve to receive such a reward as this.
לו ישמעאל יחיה: הלואי שיחיה ישמעאל, איני כדאי לקבל מתן שכר כזה:
will live before You: [This means]: [“Let him] live in fear of You,” as in (verse 1): “Walk before Me,” [which Onkelos renders:] “Serve Me.” [following Targum Jonathan]
יחיה לפניך: יחיה ביראתך, כמו (פסוק א) התהלך לפני, פלח קדמי:
19And God said, "Indeed, your wife Sarah will bear you a son, and you shall name him Isaac, and I will establish My covenant with him as an everlasting covenant for his seed after him. יטוַיֹּ֣אמֶר אֱלֹהִ֗ים אֲבָל֙ שָׂרָ֣ה אִשְׁתְּךָ֗ יֹלֶ֤דֶת לְךָ֙ בֵּ֔ן וְקָרָ֥אתָ אֶת־שְׁמ֖וֹ יִצְחָ֑ק וַֽהֲקִֽמֹתִ֨י אֶת־בְּרִיתִ֥י אִתּ֛וֹ לִבְרִ֥ית עוֹלָ֖ם לְזַרְע֥וֹ אַֽחֲרָֽיו:
Indeed: אֲבָל is an expression of a confirmation of a statement, and likewise (below 42:21): “Indeed (אֲבָל), we are guilty”; (II Kings 4:14): “Indeed (אֲבָל), she has no son.” - [from Targumim]
אבל: לשון אמתת דברים, וכן (לקמן מב כא) אבל אשמים אנחנו, (מ"ב ד יד) אבל בן אין לה:
and you shall name him Isaac: Heb. יִצְחָק, because of the rejoicing (צְחוֹק) (Mid. Chaseroth v’Yetheroth). And some say: because of the ten (י) trials, and Sarah’s ninety (צ) years, and the eighth (ח) day on which he was circumcised, and Abraham’s hundred (ק) years. (Pirkei d’Rabbi Eliezer , ch. 32). (Other editions: “And My covenant.” Why is this written? Is it not already written (verse 9): “And you shall keep My covenant, you and your seed, etc.?” But because He said (verse 7): “And I will establish, etc.,” one might think that the sons of Ishmael and the sons of Keturah are included in the establishment [of the covenant]. Therefore, Scripture states: “And I will establish My covenant with him,” and not with others. Now, why does it say [again in verse 21]: “But My covenant I will establish with Isaac?” This teaches us that he was holy from the womb. Another explanation [for the repetition of verse 19]: Said Rabbi Abba: Scripture here derives an a fortiori conclusion regarding the son of the mistress from [what is written regarding] the son of the handmaid. It is written here: “Behold I have blessed him, and I will make him fruitful, and I will multiply him.” This refers to Ishmael. How much more so, “But My covenant I will establish with Isaac!” (Gen. Rabbah 47:5).
וקראת את שמו יצחק: על שם הצחוק. ויש אומרים על שם י' נסיונות, וצ' שנה של שרה, וח' ימים שנימול, וק' שנה של אברהם. והקימותי את בריתי למה נאמר, והרי כבר כתיב (פסוק ט) ואתה את בריתי תשמור אתה וזרעך וגו' אלא לפי שאומר (פסוק ז) והקמותי וגו', יכול בני ישמעאל ובני קטורה בכלל הקיום, תלמוד לומר והקמותי את בריתי אתו, ולא עם אחרים. ואת בריתי אקים את יצחק, למה נאמר, [אלא למד שהיה קדוש מבטן]. דבר אחר אמר ר' אבא מכאן למד קל וחומר בן הגבירה מבן האמה, כתיב (פסוק כ) כי הנה ברכתי אותו והפריתי אותו והרביתי אותו, זה ישמעאל וקל וחומר ואת בריתי אקים את יצחק:
My covenant: The covenant of circumcision shall be given over [only] to the seed of Isaac. See Sanh. 59.
את בריתי: ברית המילה תהא מסורה לזרעו של יצחק:
20And regarding Ishmael, I have heard you; behold I have blessed him, and I will make him fruitful, and I will multiply him exceedingly; he will beget twelve princes, and I will make him into a great nation. כוּלְיִשְׁמָעֵאל֘ שְׁמַעְתִּ֒יךָ֒ הִנֵּ֣ה | בֵּרַ֣כְתִּי אֹת֗וֹ וְהִפְרֵיתִ֥י אֹת֛וֹ וְהִרְבֵּיתִ֥י אֹת֖וֹ בִּמְאֹ֣ד מְאֹ֑ד שְׁנֵֽים־עָשָׂ֤ר נְשִׂיאִם֙ יוֹלִ֔יד וּנְתַתִּ֖יו לְג֥וֹי גָּדֽוֹל:
twelve princes: Heb. נְשִׂיאִים. They will disappear like clouds, as (Prov. 25:14): Clouds (נְשִׂיאִים) and wind. — [from Gen. Rabbah 47:5]
שנים עשר נשיאם: כעננים יכלו, כמו (משלי כה יד) נשיאים ורוח:
21But My covenant I will establish with Isaac, whom Sarah will bear to you at this time next year." כאוְאֶת־בְּרִיתִ֖י אָקִ֣ים אֶת־יִצְחָ֑ק אֲשֶׁר֩ תֵּלֵ֨ד לְךָ֤ שָׂרָה֙ לַמּוֹעֵ֣ד הַזֶּ֔ה בַּשָּׁנָ֖ה הָֽאַחֶֽרֶת:
22And He finished speaking with him, and God went up from above Abraham. כבוַיְכַ֖ל לְדַבֵּ֣ר אִתּ֑וֹ וַיַּ֣עַל אֱלֹהִ֔ים מֵעַ֖ל אַבְרָהָֽם:
from above Abraham: This is a euphemism used in reference to the Shechinah, and we learn that the righteous are the chariot of the Omnipresent. — [from Gen. Rabbah 47:6, 82:6]
מעל אברהם: לשון נקיה הוא כלפי שכינה, ולמדנו שהצדיקים מרכבתו של מקום:
23And Abraham took Ishmael his son and all those born in his house and all those purchased with his money, every male of the people of Abraham's household, and he circumcised the flesh of their foreskin on that very day, as God had spoken with him. כגוַיִּקַּ֨ח אַבְרָהָ֜ם אֶת־יִשְׁמָעֵ֣אל בְּנ֗וֹ וְאֵ֨ת כָּל־יְלִידֵ֤י בֵיתוֹ֙ וְאֵת֙ כָּל־מִקְנַ֣ת כַּסְפּ֔וֹ כָּל־זָכָ֕ר בְּאַנְשֵׁ֖י בֵּ֣ית אַבְרָהָ֑ם וַיָּ֜מָל אֶת־בְּשַׂ֣ר עָרְלָתָ֗ם בְּעֶ֨צֶם֙ הַיּ֣וֹם הַזֶּ֔ה כַּֽאֲשֶׁ֛ר דִּבֶּ֥ר אִתּ֖וֹ אֱלֹהִֽים:
on that very day: On the very day that he was commanded (Mid. Ps. 112:2), during the day and not at night. He was afraid neither of the heathens nor of the scorners. [He circumcised in the light of day] so that his enemies and his contemporaries would not say,“Had we seen him, we would not have allowed him to circumcise and to fulfill the commandment of the Omnipresent” (Gen. Rabbah 47:9).
בעצם היום: בו ביום שנצטוה, ביום ולא בלילה, לא נתיירא לא מן הגוים ולא מן הלצנים, ושלא יהיו אויביו ובני דורו אומרים אילו ראינוהו לא הנחנוהו למול ולקיים מצותו של מקום:
and he circumcised: Heb. וַיָמָל, an expression in the וַיִפְעַל form, (the active [kal] form.)
וימל: לשון ויפעל:
24And Abraham was ninety-nine years old, when he was circumcised of the flesh of his foreskin. כדוְאַ֨בְרָהָ֔ם בֶּן־תִּשְׁעִ֥ים וָתֵ֖שַׁע שָׁנָ֑ה בְּהִמֹּל֖וֹ בְּשַׂ֥ר עָרְלָתֽוֹ:
when he was circumcised: Heb. בְּהִמֹּלוֹ, when it was done to him, like (above 2:4): “when they were created (בְּהִבָּרְאָם).”
בהמולו: בהפעלו, כמו (ב ד) בהבראם:
25And Ishmael his son was thirteen years old, when he was circumcised of the flesh of his foreskin. כהוְיִשְׁמָעֵ֣אל בְּנ֔וֹ בֶּן־שְׁל֥שׁ עֶשְׂרֵ֖ה שָׁנָ֑ה בְּהִ֨מֹּל֔וֹ אֵ֖ת בְּשַׂ֥ר עָרְלָתֽוֹ:
when he was circumcised of the flesh of his foreskin: Concerning Abraham, it does not say אֵת, because he was lacking only the severing of the flesh, because it had already been flattened out by intercourse, but Ishmael, who was a youth, required that the foreskin be severed and the corona be uncovered. Therefore, in his case, it is אֵת. Gen. Rabbah (47:8).
בהמולו את בשר ערלתו: באברהם לא נאמר את, לפי שלא היה חסר אלא חתוך בשר, שכבר נתמעך על ידי תשמיש, אבל ישמעאל שהיה ילד הוזקק לחתוך ערלה ולפרוע המילה, לכך נאמר בו את:
26On that very day, Abraham was circumcised, and [so was] Ishmael his son. כובְּעֶ֨צֶם֙ הַיּ֣וֹם הַזֶּ֔ה נִמּ֖וֹל אַבְרָהָ֑ם וְיִשְׁמָעֵ֖אל בְּנֽוֹ:
On that very day: when Abraham reached the age of ninety-nine and Ishmael [reached the age of] thirteen,“Abraham was circumcised, and [so was] Ishmael his son.”
בעצם היום הזה: שמלאו לאברהם תשעים ותשע שנה ולישמעאל שלש עשרה שנים נמול אברהם וישמעאל בנו:
27And all the people of his household, those born in his house and those bought with money from foreigners, were circumcised with him. כזוְכָל־אַנְשֵׁ֤י בֵיתוֹ֙ יְלִ֣יד בָּ֔יִת וּמִקְנַת־כֶּ֖סֶף מֵאֵ֣ת בֶּן־נֵכָ֑ר נִמֹּ֖לוּ אִתּֽוֹ:
Tehillim: Psalms Chapters 44 - 48
• Hebrew text
• English text
Chapter 44
The psalmist cries and laments painfully over this bitter exile, where we and our Torah are shamed daily, when the nations say that God has exchanged us for another nation, and where we are considered as sheep for the slaughter, as a byword and taunt. It is therefore fitting that God redeem us, for the sake of His great Name that abides with us in exile.
1. For the Conductor, by the sons of Korach, a maskil.1
2. God, with our ears we have heard, our fathers have told us, of the deeds You wrought in their days, in the days of old.
3. You drove out nations with Your hand, and planted [Israel in their place]; You afflicted peoples and banished them.
4. For not by their sword did they inherit the land, and their own arm did not save them, but by Your right hand, Your arm and the light of Your countenance-for You favored them.
5. You are my king, O God; decree the salvation of Jacob.
6. Through You will we gore our adversaries; with Your Name we will trample our opponents.
7. For I do not trust in my bow, and my sword cannot save me.
8. For You have delivered us from our foes, and You shamed those who hate us.
9. In God we glory all day, and forever thank Your Name, Selah.
10. Though You abandon and disgrace us, and do not go forth with our armies;
11. You cause us to retreat from the oppressor, and those who hate us plunder for themselves;
12. You deliver us like sheep to be devoured, and scatter us among the nations;
13. You sell Your nation without gain, and do not set a high price upon them;
14. You make us a disgrace to our neighbors, the scorn and derision of those around us;
15. You make us a byword among the nations, [a cause for] nodding the head among the peoples;
16. all day long my humiliation is before me, and the shame of my face covers me
17. at the voice of the reviler and blasphemer, because of the foe and avenger-
18. all this has come upon us, yet we have not forgotten You, nor have we been false to Your covenant.
19. Our hearts have not retracted, nor have our steps strayed from Your path.
20. Even when You crushed us in the place of serpents, and shrouded us in the shadow of death-
21. did we forget the Name of our God, and extend our hands to a foreign god?
22. Is it not so that God can examine this, for He knows the secrets of the heart.
23. For it is for Your sake that we are killed all the time; we are regarded as sheep for the slaughter.
24. Arise! Why do You sleep, my Lord? Wake up! Do not abandon [us] forever!
25. Why do You conceal Your countenance and forget our affliction and distress?
26. For our souls are bowed to the dust, our bellies cleave to the earth.
27. Arise! Be our help, and redeem us for the sake of Your kindness.
FOOTNOTES
1.A psalm intended to enlighten and impart knowledge(Metzudot).
Chapter 45
The psalmist composed this psalm referring to Moshiach. He describes his greatness, his attributes, his glory, his wealth, and his reign; and states that Israel anticipates him, remembering and saying in every generation, "When will King Moshiach come?"
1. For the Conductor, upon the shoshanim,1 By the sons of Korach; a maskil,2 a song of love.
2. My heart is astir with a noble theme; I say, "My composition is for the king;3 my tongue is the pen of a skillful scribe.”
3. You are the most handsome of men, charm is poured upon your lips; therefore has God blessed you forever.
4. Gird your sword upon your thigh, O mighty one-it is your majesty and splendor.
5. And with your splendor, succeed and ride on for the sake of truth and righteous humility; and your right hand will guide you to awesome deeds.
6. Your arrows are sharpened-nations fall beneath you-[the arrows fall] into the hearts of the king's enemies.
7. Your throne, O ruler, is forever and ever, [for] the scepter of justice is the scepter of your kingdom.
8. You love righteousness and hate wickedness; therefore has God, your God, anointed you with oil of joy above your peers.
9. Myrrh, aloes and cassia are [the fragrance] of all your garments, which are from ivory palaces that bring you joy.
10. Daughters of kings visit you, and the queen stands erect at your right hand, adorned in the fine gold of Ophir.
11. Hear, O daughter, and observe, incline your ear; forget your people and your father's house.
12. Then the king will desire your beauty. He is your master-bow to him.
13. The daughter of Tyre, the wealthiest of nations, will seek your favor with a gift.
14. All the glory of the princess is within; her clothing surpasses settings of gold.
15. In embroidered garments she will be brought to the king; the maidens in her train, her companions, will be led to you.
16. They will be brought with gladness and joy, they will enter the palace of the king.
17. Your sons will succeed your fathers; you will appoint them ministers throughout the land.
18. I will cause Your Name to be remembered throughout the generations; therefore will the nations praise You forever and ever.
FOOTNOTES
1.A musical instrument shaped like a shoshana, a rose (Metzudot).
2.A psalm intended to enlighten and impart knowledge(Metzudot).
3.Reffering to the Messiah. (Metzudot).
Chapter 46
This psalm tells of the Gog and Magog era (the Messianic age), when man will cast aside his weapons, and warfare will be no more.
1. For the Conductor, by the sons of Korach, on the alamot,1 a song.
2. God is our refuge and strength, a help in distress, He is most accessible.
3. Therefore, we will not be afraid when the earth is transformed, when mountains collapse in the heart of the seas;
4. when its waters roar and are muddied, and mountains quake before His grandeur, Selah.
5. The river2-its streams will bring joy to the city of God, the sacred dwelling of the Most High.
6. God is in her midst, she will not falter; God will help her at the approach of morning.
7. Nations clamor, kingdoms stumble; He raises His voice and the earth dissolves.
8. The Lord of Hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our stronghold forever.
9. Go and see the works of the Lord, Who has wrought devastation in the land.
10. To the end of the earth He causes wars to cease; He breaks the bow, snaps the spear, and burns the wagons in fire.
11. Stop [waging war]! And know that I am God; I will be exalted among the nations, exalted upon the earth.
12. The Lord of Hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our stronghold forever.
FOOTNOTES
1.A musical instrument (Rashi)
2.Flowing from Eden (Rashi)
Chapter 47
Following the battle of Gog and Magog (in the Messianic era), war will be no more. God will grant us salvation, and we will merit to go up to the Holy Temple for the festivals, Amen.
1. For the Conductor, a psalm by the sons of Korach.
2. All you nations, clap hands; sound [the shofar] to God with a sound of jubilation.
3. For the Lord is most high, awesome; a great King over all the earth.
4. He subdues peoples under us, nations beneath our feet.
5. He chooses our heritage for us, the glory of Jacob whom He loves eternally.
6. God ascends through teruah, the Lord-through the sound of the shofar.
7. Sing, O sing to God; sing, O sing to our King.
8. For God is King over all the earth; sing, O man of understanding.
9. God reigns over the nations; God is seated on His holy throne.
10. The most noble of the nations are gathered, the nation of the God of Abraham; for the protectors of the earth belong to God; He is greatly exalted.
Chapter 48
The psalmist prophesies about the Messianic era, singing the praises of a rebuilt Jerusalem and the sacrifices brought there. At that time Israel will say, "As we heard from the mouths of the prophets, so have we merited to see!"
1. A song, a psalm by the sons of Korach.
2. The Lord is great and exceedingly acclaimed in the city of God, His holy mountain.
3. Beautiful in landscape, the joy of the whole earth is Mount Zion, on the northern slopes, the city of the great King.
4. In her citadels, God became known as a tower of strength.
5. For behold, the kings assembled, they advanced in concert [to invade her].
6. They saw [the wonders of the Almighty] and were astounded; they were terror-stricken, they hastened to flee.
7. Trembling seized them there, pangs as of a woman in the throes of labor;
8. [they were crushed as] by an east wind that shatters the ships of Tarshish.
9. As we have heard, so have we seen, in the city of the Lord of Hosts, in the city of our God; may God establish it for all eternity.
10. God, we have been hoping for Your kindness [to be revealed] within Your Sanctuary.
11. As Your Name, O God, [is great,] so is Your praise to the ends of the earth; Your right hand is filled with righteousness.
12. Let Mount Zion rejoice, let the towns of Judah exult, because of Your judgments.
13. Walk around Zion, encircle her, count her towers.
14. Consider well her ramparts, behold her lofty citadels, that you may recount it to a later generation.
15. For this God is our God forever and ever; He will lead us eternally.
Tanya: Iggeret HaKodesh, middle of Epistle 26
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Shabbat, Cheshvan 8, 5778 · October 28, 2017
Today's Tanya Lesson
Iggeret HaKodesh, middle of Epistle 26
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והנה, כשהמלכות דאצילות מתלבשת בקליפת נוגה, כדי לברר הניצוצות שנפלו בחטא אדם הראשון
Now, when Malchut of Atzilut is vested in kelipat nogah in order to extract and refine the sparks that fell with the sin of Adam,
וגם הרפ״ח ניצוצין שנפלו בשבירת הכלים
as well as the 288 sparks that fell with the “breaking of the vessels,”
The concept of shevirat hakelim (the primordial “breaking of the vessels”) and the elevation of the 288 sparks of holiness hidden in the material world is explained at length elsewhere in the literature of Chassidut.
אזי גם המלכות דאצילות נקראת בשם עץ הדעת טוב ורע, לגבי זעיר אנפין דאצילות
Malchut of Atzilut, too, is then referred to as the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, relative to Z’eir Anpin of Atzilut
שאינו יורד שם, ונקרא עץ חיים
which does not descend there and which is referred to as the Tree of Life.
והנה התלבשות המלכות בקליפת נוגה, הוא סוד גלות השכינה
And the investiture of [the Sefirah of] Malchut in kelipat nogah is the Kabbalistic principle of the exile of the Shechinah,
אשר שלט האדם באדם כו׳
whereby1 “man rules over man, to his detriment.”
In Epistle 25 (above), the Alter Rebbe quotes the exposition of this verse in Sefer HaGilgulim. During the time of exile, the “evil man” (of kelipah) rules over the “sacred man” (i.e., the holy “side” of the universe). At this time, the Divine Presence is in a state of exile within the universe. However, this temporary dominion of evil is “to his [ultimate] detriment,” for its underlying intent is that the sparks of holiness that are embedded within evil, be extracted and elevated.
* * *
The Alter Rebbe will now answer another question which he himself had posed earlier.
The Ra’aya Mehemna had stated that so long as the bipolar influence of the Tree of Knowledge of [both] Good and Evil is dominant in the world, Torah scholars (who are likened to the Shabbat and festivals) are supported only by their unlettered (“weekday”) brethren, whose food is sometimes pure but sometimes not. This is why the scholars engage in the study of the correspondingly bipolar laws of issur vs. hetter (ritual prohibition vs. permission), and the like.
Concerning this statement the Alter Rebbe asked above: Even though the Sages in Second Temple times tilled their own fields and vineyards, did they not mainly study the very same laws of issur and hetter, and the like?
In reply, the Alter Rebbe now explains the meaning of this passage from Ra’aya Mehemna.
During the present era of exile, when the world is dominated by the influence of the Tree of Knowledge of [both] Good and Evil, the Divine Presence grants life-force to the chitzonim. These negative forces belong to the ambivalent realm of kelipat nogah, which veils the holy potential embedded in the material things of this world. (Torah scholars are nourished only by the distilled essence of the Divinely-endowed life-force.)
In order to extract and refine the sparks of holiness hidden in this material world during this era of exile, scholars study the laws of prohibition and permission, and the like. Through painstaking debate and deliberation, they isolate and salvage that which is permitted from that which is prohibited, and that which is pure from that which is impure. Ultimately, their Torah study removes the Divinely-imposed veil, so that a clear adjudication of the law results.
This is what the Alter Rebbe now goes on to say:
וזהו שכתוב ברעיא מהימנא: ובזמנא דאילנא דטוב ורע שלטא כו׳, אינון כו׳
And this is the meaning of the statement in Ra’aya Mehemna: “While the Tree of Good and Evil dominates [the world],... these [Sages, who are likened to the Sabbaths and festivals, have nothing except what is given to them by those who are called ‘unsanctified ones,’...].”
דהיינו: בזמן גלות השכינה, שמשפעת לחיצונים שהם בקליפת נוגה, שהערב רב יונקים משם
This means that at the time of the exile of the Shechinah — which grants life-force to the chitzonim that belong in the realm of kelipat nogah, from which the “mixed multitude” derive their life-force,2
ומתמציתו ניזונין תלמידי חכמים בגלות
and from whose distilled essence the Torah scholars are nourished during the exile, —
ואז, עיקר עבודת האדם, ועיקר עסק התורה והמצות, הוא לברר הניצוצות, כנודע מהאריז״ל
at this time the main spiritual task of man, and the main purpose of being engaged in Torah and the commandments, is to disencumber and elevate the sparks, as is known from the teachings of R. Isaac Luria, of blessed memory.
לכן, עיקר ענין הלימוד הוא בעיון ופלפול הלכה, באיסור והיתר, טומאה וטהרה
For this reason, study chiefly involves deliberation and argumentation on the laws of issur and hetter, impurity and purity,
לברר המותר והטהור מהאסור והטמא, על ידי עיון ופלפול הלכה, בחכמה בינה ודעת
in order to disencumber the permitted and the pure from the forbidden and the impure by means of deliberation and argumentation on the law — with wisdom, understanding and knowledge, with all the three intellective faculties of the soul that clarify the law.
כנודע, דאורייתא מחכמה נפקת, ובחכמה דייקא אתברירו
For as is known,3 the Torah derives from Chochmah. Hence, [the sparks of holiness hidden in a legal question] can be extracted and elevated only through Chochmah.4
והיינו חכמה עילאה דאצילות, המלובשת במלכות דאצילות
Specifically: the Supernal Chochmah of Atzilut which is vested in Malchut of Atzilut —
סוד תורה שבעל פה
this being the Kabbalistic principle of the Oral Torah
(בסוד אבא יסד ברתא)
(5according to the Kabbalistic principle by which6 “the ‘father’ (i.e., Chochmah of Atzilut) begat (lit., ‘founded’) the ‘daughter’ (i.e., Malchut of Atzilut)”) —
המלובשת במלכות דיצירה
which, in turn, is vested in Malchut of Yetzirah.
[סוד] המשניות (וברייתות המלובשות בקליפת נוגה, שכנגד עולם היצירה
[7This accords with the Kabbalistic principle of] the Mishnayot (8and the Beraitot that are vested in the kelipat nogah, which corresponds to the World of Yetzirah;
ששם מתחיל בחינת הדעת [הרע] שבנוגה)
for there begins the Knowledge [of Good and Evil] [9or: “[for there begins] the evil”] which is inherent in nogah), for the kelipat nogah in the World of Yetzirah is equally good and evil.
[נוסח אחר: והברייתות המלובשות בקליפת נוגה שכנגד עולם העשיה, ששם מתחיל בחינת הרע שבנוגה]
[10A variant reading: “and the Beraitot that are vested in the kelipat nogah which corresponds to the World of Asiyah, from where there begins the evil of nogah”], for the kelipat nogah of Asiyahis mostly evil and minimally good.
כנודע מהאריז״ל
The above is known from the teachings of R. Isaac Luria, of blessed memory.
* * *
FOOTNOTES | |
1. | Kohelet 8:9. |
2. | In the original, eirev-rav; cf. Shmot 12:38. Likkutei Haggahot LeSefer HaTanya emends our text to “nations of the world.” |
3. | Zohar II, 85a; et al. |
4. | Ibid., 254b. |
5. | These parentheses are in the original text. |
6. | Zohar III, 248a. |
7. | These brackets are in the original text. |
8. | These parentheses are in the original text. |
9. | These brackets are in the original text. |
10. | These brackets are in the original text. |
• Sefer Hamitzvot:
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Shabbat, Cheshvan 8, 5778 · October 28, 2017
Today's Mitzvah
A daily digest of Maimonides’ classic work "Sefer Hamitzvot"
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The Daily Mitzvah schedule runs parallel to the daily study of 3 chapters of Maimonides' 14-volume code. There are instances when the Mitzvah is repeated a few days consecutively while the exploration of the same Mitzvah continues in the in-depth track.
Positive Commandment 19
Grace after Meals
"And you will eat and be sated then you will bless G‑d"—Deuteronomy 8:10.
We are commanded to express gratitude to G‑d after every meal.
Full text of this Mitzvah »
Grace after Meals
Positive Commandment 19
Translated by Berel Bell
The 19th mitzvah is that we are commanded to thank G‑d (exalted be He) after each time we eat.1
The source of this commandment is G‑d's statement,2 "When you have eaten and are satiated, You shall bless G‑d your L‑rd."
The Tosefta3 says, "Reciting the blessing after eating is a mitzvah of the Torah, as the verse says, 'When you have eaten and are satiated, you shall bless G‑d your L‑rd.' "
The details of this mitzvah are explained in many places in the tractate Berachos.4
FOOTNOTES
1.This speaks primarily of bread made from the five grains. After eating other types of food, one is required to recite a blessing by Rabbinic ordinance.
2.Deut. 8:10.
3.Berachos, beginning of Chapter 6.
4.The Rambam usually explains whether or not a particular mitzvah is obligatory on women. However, in Hilchos Berachos, Chapter 5, Halacha 1, he rules that it is halachically doubtful whether they are obligated by Torah or Rabbinic law.
Rambam:
• 1 Chapter A Day: Talmud Torah Talmud Torah - Chapter Three
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Talmud Torah - Chapter Three
1
Three crowns were conferred upon Israel: the crown of Torah, the crown of priesthood, and the crown of royalty. Aaron merited the crown of priesthood, as [Numbers 25:13] states: "And it will be an eternal covenant of priesthood for him and his descendants after him."
David merited the crown of royalty, as [Psalms 89:37] states: "His seed will continue forever, and his throne will be as the sun before Me."
The crown of Torah is set aside, waiting, and ready for each Jew, as [implied by Deuteronomy 33:4]: "The Torah which Moses commanded us is the inheritance of the congregation of Jacob." Whoever desires may come and take it.
Lest you say that the other crowns surpass the crown of Torah, [Proverbs 8:15-16] states: "By me, kings reign, princes decree justice, and nobles rule." Thus, you have learned that the crown of Torah is greater than the other two.
א
בשלשה כתרים נכתרו ישראל כתר תורה וכתר כהונה וכתר מלכות כתר כהונה זכה בו אהרן שנאמר והיתה לו ולזרעו אחריו ברית כהנת עולם כתר מלכות זכה בו דוד שנאמר זרעו לעולם יהיה וכסאו כשמש נגדי כתר תורה הרי מונח ועומד ומוכן לכל ישראל שנאמר תורה צוה לנו משה מורשה קהלת יעקב כל מי שירצה יבא ויטול שמא תאמר שאותם הכתרים גדולים מכתר תורה הרי הוא אומר בי מלכים ימלוכו ורוזנים יחוקקו צדק בי שרים ישורו הא למדת שכתר תורה גדול משניהם:
Commentary on Halachah 1
2
Our Sages declared that even a Torah Sage who is a mamzer deserves precedence over a high priest who is unlearned, as [implied by Proverbs 3:15]: "It is more precious than pearls." [That verse can be interpreted:] more precious than the High Priest who enters the innermost chambers.
ב
אמרו חכמים ממזר ת"ח קודם לכהן גדול עם הארץ שנאמר יקרה היא מפנינים מכהן גדול שנכנס לפני ולפנים:
Commentary on Halachah 2
3
None of the other mitzvot can be equated to the study of Torah. Rather, the study of Torah can be equated to all the mitzvot, because study leads to deed. Therefore, study takes precedence over deed in all cases.
ג
אין לך מצוה בכל המצות כולן שהיא שקולה כנגד תלמוד תורה אלא תלמוד תורה כנגד כל המצות כולן שהתלמוד מביא לידי מעשה לפיכך התלמוד קודם למעשה בכל מקום:
Commentary on Halachah 3
4
[The following rules apply] when a person is confronted with the performance of a mitzvah and the study of Torah: If the mitzvah can be performed by another individual, he should not interrupt his studies. If not, he should perform the mitzvah, and then return to his studies.
ד
היה לפניו עשיית מצוה ותלמוד תורה אם אפשר למצוה להעשות ע"י אחרים לא יפסיק תלמודו ואם לאו יעשה המצוה ויחזור לתלמודו:
Commentary on Halachah 4
5
The first aspect of a person's judgement [in the world to come] will center on Torah study. Only afterwards will his other deeds [be considered].
Accordingly, our Sages would say: "A person should always occupy himself in Torah study, whether for God's sake or even if not for God's sake, for from [the study of Torah which] is not carried out for God's sake will come [the study of Torah which] is carried out for God's sake.
ה
תחלת דינו של אדם אינו נידון אלא על התלמוד ואחר כך על שאר מעשיו לפיכך אמרו חכמים לעולם יעסוק אדם בתורה בין לשמה בין שלא לשמה שמתוך שלא לשמה בא לשמה:
Commentary on Halachah 5
6
A person whose heart inspires him to fulfill this mitzvah in a fitting manner and to become crowned with the crown of Torah should not divert his attention to other matters. He should not set his intent on acquiring Torah together with wealth and honor simultaneously.
[Rather,] this is the path of Torah: Eat bread with salt, drink water in small measure, sleep on the ground, live a life of difficulty, and toil in Torah.
The task is not incumbent upon you to complete, nor are you free to desist from it. If you have acquired much Torah, you have acquired much reward, and that reward is commensurate with the difficulty [invested].
ו
מי שנשאו לבו לקיים מצוה זו כראוי ולהיות מוכתר בכתר תורה לא יסיח דעתו לדברים אחרים ולא ישים על לבו שיקנה תורה עם העושר והכבוד כאחת כך היא דרכה של תורה פת במלח תאכל ומים במשורה תשתה ועל הארץ תישן וחיי צער תחיה ובתורה אתה עמל ולא עליך הדבר לגמור ולא אתה בן חורין ליבטל ממנה ואם הרבית תורה הרבית שכר והשכר לפי הצער:
Commentary on Halachah 6
7
Perhaps, one will say: "[I will interrupt my studies] until after I gather money, and then I will return and study, [I will interrupt my studies] until after I buy what I need, and then, when I can divert my attention from my business, I will return and study." If you consider such thoughts, you will never merit the crown of Torah.
Rather, make your work secondary, and your Torah study a fixed matter. Do not say: "When I have free time, I will study," for perhaps you will never have free time.
ז
שמא תאמר עד שאקבץ ממון אחזור ואקרא עד שאקנה מה שאני צריך ואפנה מעסקי ואחזור ואקרא אם תעלה מחשבה זו על לבך אין אתה זוכה לכתרה של תורה לעולם אלא עשה תורתך קבע ומלאכתך עראי ולא תאמר לכשאפנה אשנה שמא לא תפנה:
Commentary on Halachah 7
8
It is written in the Torah [Deuteronomy 30:12, 13]: "It is not in the heavens....It is not across the sea...." [This implies:] "It is not in the heavens" - i.e., it is not found in the proud spirited. "It is not across the sea" - i.e., it is not found in those who travel across the sea.
Therefore, our Sages said: "Not everyone who is involved in business will become wise." Our Sages also commanded: "Minimize your business activities and occupy yourself with Torah."
ח
כתוב בתורה לא בשמים היא ולא מעבר לים היא לא בשמים היא לא בגסי הרוח היא מצויה ולא במהלכי מעבר לים היא לפיכך אמרו חכמים לא כל המרבה בסחורה מחכים וצוו חכמים הוי ממעט בעסק ועסוק בתורה:
Commentary on Halachah 8
9
The words of Torah can be compared to water, as [Isaiah 55:1] states: "Behold, all who are thirsty, come to the water." This teaches you that just as water does not collect on an incline, but rather flows from it and collects in a low place, similarly, the words of Torah will not be found in the arrogant or in the hearts of any of the haughty, but rather in the humble and lowly, who sit in the dust at the feet of the Sages and remove the desires and pleasures of the times from their hearts. They do only a minimal amount of work each day [to earn] their livelihood if they have nothing else to eat. The rest of their days and nights are involved with Torah study.
ט
דברי תורה נמשלו כמים שנאמר הוי כל צמא לכו למים לומר לך מה מים אינם מתכנסין במקום מדרון אלא נזחלין מעליו ומתקבצים במקום אשבורן כך דברי תורה אינם נמצאים בגסי הרוח ולא בלב כל גבה לב אלא בדכא ושפל רוח שמתאבק בעפר רגלי החכמים ומסיר התאוות ותענוגי הזמן מלבו ועושה מלאכה בכל יום מעט כדי חייו אם לא היה לו מה יאכל ושאר יומו ולילו עוסק בתורה:
Commentary on Halachah 9
10
Anyone who comes to the conclusion that he should involve himself in Torah study without doing work and derive his livelihood from charity, desecrates [God's] name, dishonors the Torah, extinguishes the light of faith, brings evil upon himself, and forfeits the life of the world to come, for it is forbidden to derive benefit from the words of Torah in this world.
Our Sages declared: "Whoever benefits from the words of Torah forfeits his life in the world." Also, they commanded and declared: "Do not make them a crown to magnify oneself, nor an axe to chop with." Also, they commanded and declared: "Love work and despise Rabbinic positions." All Torah that is not accompanied by work will eventually be negated and lead to sin. Ultimately, such a person will steal from others.
י
כל המשים על לבו שיעסוק בתורה ולא יעשה מלאכה ויתפרנס מן הצדקה הרי זה חלל את השם ובזה את התורה וכבה מאור הדת וגרם רעה לעצמו ונטל חייו מן העולם הבא לפי שאסור ליהנות מדברי תורה בעולם הזה אמרו חכמים כל הנהנה מדברי תורה נטל חייו מן העולם ועוד צוו ואמרו אל תעשם עטרה להתגדל בהן ולא קרדום לחפור בהן ועוד צוו ואמרו אהוב את המלאכה ושנא את הרבנות וכל תורה שאין עמה מלאכה סופה בטילה וגוררת עון וסוף אדם זה שיהא מלסטם את הבריות:
Commentary on Halachah 10
11
It is a tremendous advantage for a person to derive his livelihood from his own efforts. This attribute was possessed by the pious of the early generations. In this manner, one will merit all [types of] honor and benefit in this world and in the world to come, as [Psalms 128:2] states: "If you eat the toil of your hands, you will be happy and it will be good for you."
"You will be happy" - in this world. "It will be good for you" - in the world to come, which is entirely good.
יא
מעלה גדולה היא למי שהוא מתפרנס ממעשה ידיו ומדת חסידים הראשונים היא ובזה זוכה לכל כבוד וטובה שבעולם הזה ולעולם הבא שנאמר יגיע כפיך כי תאכל אשריך וטוב לך אשריך בעולם הזה וטוב לך לעולם הבא שכולו טוב:
Commentary on Halachah 11
12
The words of Torah will not be permanently acquired by a person who applies himself feebly [to obtain] them, and not by those who study amid pleasure and [an abundance] of food and drink. Rather, one must give up his life for them, constantly straining his body to the point of discomfort, without granting sleep to his eyes or slumber to his eyelids.
The Sages alluded to this concept, [interpreting Numbers 19:14:] "This is the Torah, a man should he die in a tent..." [to mean that] the Torah cannot be permanently acquired except by a person who gives up his life in the tents of wisdom.
Similarly, Solomon said in his wisdom [Proverbs 24:10]: "If you faint in the day of adversity, your strength is small." He also said [Ecclesiastes 2:9]: "Also, my wisdom remained with me." [This can be interpreted to mean:] The wisdom which I learned in anger, this is what remained with me.
Our Sages declared: A covenant has been established that anyone who wearies himself in Torah study in a house of study will not forget it quickly. Anyone who wearies himself in Torah study in private will become wise, as [Proverbs 11:2] states: "To the modest will come wisdom."
Whoever raises his voice during his studies will permanently acquire the subject matter. In contrast, one who reads silently will forget quickly.
יב
אין דברי תורה מתקיימין במי שמרפה עצמו עליהן ולא באלו שלומדין מתוך עידון ומתוך אכילה ושתיה אלא במי שממית עצמו עליהן ומצער גופו תמיד ולא יתן שינה לעיניו ולעפעפיו תנומה אמרו חכמים דרך רמז זאת התורה אדם כי ימות באהל אין התורה מתקיימת אלא במי שממית עצמו באהלי החכמים וכן אמר שלמה בחכמתו התרפית ביום צרה צר כחכה ועוד אמר אף חכמתי עמדה לי חכמה שלמדתי באף היא עמדה לי אמרו חכמים ברית כרותה שכל היגע בתורתו בבית המדרש לא במהרה הוא משכח וכל היגע בתלמודו בצנעה מחכים שנאמר ואת צנועים חכמה וכל המשמיע קולו בשעת תלמודו תלמודו מתקיים בידו אבל הקורא בלחש במהרה הוא שוכח:
Commentary on Halachah 12
13
Even though it is a mitzvah to study during the day and at night, it is only at night that a person acquires most of his wisdom. Therefore, a person who desires to merit the crown of Torah should be careful with all his nights, not giving up even one to sleep, eating, drinking, talk, or the like. Rather, [they should be devoted to] the study of Torah and the words of wisdom.
Our Sages declared: "The song of Torah can [be heard] only at night, as [Eichah 2:19] states: 'Arise, sing out at night...’“
Whoever occupies himself with Torah study at night will have a strand of [Divine] favor extended over him during the day, as [implied by Psalms 42:9]: "During the day, God ordains His kindness and, at night, His song is with me, a prayer to the living God."
[In contrast], any house in which the words of Torah cannot be heard at night will be consumed by fire, as [implied by Job 20:26]: "All the darkness is hidden away from His treasures; a fire that need not be blown will consume him."
[The verse, Numbers 16:31,] "He scorned the word of God," applies to someone who pays no attention to Torah at all. Similarly, anyone who has the potential to occupy himself with Torah study and does not, or who has studied both the Written and Oral Law and turned away to the vanities of the world, leaving behind his study and ignoring it, is included in the category of "those who scorn the word of God."
Our Sages declared: "Whoever neglects Torah study when wealthy will ultimately neglect it amidst poverty. Whoever maintains the Torah in poverty will ultimately maintain it amidst prosperity." This concept is explicitly mentioned in the Torah [Deuteronomy 28:47-48], which states: "Because you did not serve God, your Lord, with happiness and good feeling when there was an abundance of everything, you shall serve your enemies," and [Deuteronomy 8:16] states: "so that you shall suffer...so that ultimately He will make you prosper."
יג
אע"פשמצוה ללמוד ביום ובלילה אין אדם למד רוב חכמתו אלא בלילה לפיכך מי שרצה לזכות בכתר התורה יזהר בכל לילותיו ולא יאבד אפילו אחד מהן בשינה ואכילה ושתיה ושיחה וכיוצא בהן אלא בתלמוד תורה ודברי חכמה אמרו חכמים אין רנה של תורה אלא בלילה שנאמר קומי רוני בלילה וכל העוסק בתורה בלילה חוט של חסד נמשך עליו ביום שנאמר יומם יצוה ה' חסדו ובלילה שירה עמי תפלה לאל חיי וכל בית שאין נשמעים בו דברי תורה בלילה אש אוכלתו שנאמר כל חשך טמון לצפוניו תאכלהו אש לא נופח כי דבר ה' בזה זה שלא השגיח על דברי תורה כל עיקר וכן כל שאפשר לו לעסוק בתורה ואינו עוסק או שקרא ושנה ופירש להבלי עולם והניח תלמודו וזנחו הרי זה בכלל בוזה דבר ה' אמרו חכמים כל המבטל את התורה מעושר סופו לבטלה מעוני וכל המקיים את התורה מעוני סופו לקיימה מעושר וענין זה מפורש הוא בתורה הרי הוא אומר תחת אשר לא עבדת את ה' אלהיך בשמחה ובטוב לבב מרוב כל ועבדת את אויביך ואומר למען ענותך להטיבך באחריתך:
Commentary on Halachah 13
Rambam:
• 3 Chapters A Day: Berachot Berachot - Chapter Four, Berachot Berachot - Chapter Five, Berachot Berachot - Chapter Six
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Berachot - Chapter Four
1
Everyone who recites grace or the single blessing that includes the three [blessings of grace] should recite these blessings in the place where he ate. If he ate while walking, he should sit down where he concluded eating and recite the blessings. If he ate while standing, he should sit down in his place and recite grace.
If a person forgets to recite grace and remembers before his food becomes digested, he may recite grace in the place where he remembers. If he intentionally [did not recite grace in the place where he ate], he should return to his place and recite grace. Should he recite grace in the place where he remembers, he fulfills his obligation.
Similarly, a person who recites grace while standing or while walking fulfills his obligation. Nevertheless, at the outset, a person should not recite grace or the single blessing which includes the three [blessings of grace] except when he is seated in the place where he ate.
א
כל המברך ברכת המזון או ברכה אחת מעין שלש צריך לברך אותה במקום שאכל אכל כשהוא מהלך יושב במקום שפסק ויברך אכל כשהוא עומד יושב במקומו ויברך שכח לברך ברכת המזון ונזכר קודם שיתעכל המזון שבמעיו מברך במקום שנזכר ואם היה מזיד חוזר למקומו ומברך ואם בירך במקום שנזכר יצא ידי חובתו וכן אם בירך כשהוא עומד או כשהוא מהלך יצא ידי חובתו ולכתחלה לא יברך ברכת המזון ולא ברכה שמעין שלש אלא כשהוא יושב ובמקום שאכל:
2
A person who is in doubt whether he recited the blessing hamotzi or not should not repeat the blessing, because it is not required by the Torah.
A person who forgets to recite hamotzi should recite the blessing if he remembers before he completes his meal. If he remembers after he completed his meal, he should not recite the blessing.
ב
מי שנסתפק לו אם בירך המוציא או לא בירך המוציא אינו חוזר ומברך מפני שאינו מן התורה שכח לברך המוציא אם נזכר עד שלא גמר סעודתו חוזר ומברך ואם נזכר לאחר שגמר אינו חוזר ומברך:
3
[The following rules apply when] a person was eating in one house, interrupted his meal, and went to another house, or when a friend called to him and he went out the doorway of his house to speak to him: When he returns, he is required to recite grace after what he originally ate, and to recite hamotzi again because he changed his place. [Only] after this, may he complete his meal.
ג
היה אוכל בבית זה ופסק סעודתו והלך לבית אחר או שהיה אוכל וקראהו חבירו לדבר עמו ויצא לו לפתח ביתו וחזר הואיל ושינה מקומו צריך לברך למפרע על מה שאכל וחוזר ומברך בתחלה המוציא ואחר כך יגמור סעודתו:
4
[The following rules apply when] friends joined to eat a meal together and [interrupted their meal to] go out to greet a groom or a bride: If they left an old man or a sick person [in the place where they ate], they may return to their place and complete their meal without having to recite a second blessing.
If they did not leave an old man or a sick person [in the place where they ate], when they depart they are required to recite a blessing after eating. When they return, they must recite a blessing before [beginning to eat again].
ד
חברים שהיו יושבים לאכול ויצאו לקראת חתן או לקראת כלה אם הניחו שם זקן או חולה חוזרין למקומן וגומרין סעודתן ואינן צריכין לברך שנייה ואם לא הניחו שם אדם כשהן יוצאין צריכין ברכה למפרע וכשהן חוזרין צריכין ברכה לכתחלה:
5
Similar laws apply when people drink together as a group or eat fruits together. Whenever one changes one's place, it is considered as if he interrupted his eating. Therefore, he must recite a blessing after what he ate and must recite a second blessing before partaking of any other foods.
A person who changes his place from one corner to another in the same room need not recite another blessing. In contrast, a person who ate on the east side of a fig tree and goes to eat on the west side of the fig tree must recite another blessing.
ה
וכן אם היו מסובין בשתיה או לאכול פירות שכל המשנה מקומו הרי פסק אכילתו ולפיכך מברך למפרע על מה שאכל וחוזר ומברך שנייה לכתחלה על מה שהוא צריך לאכול והמשנה מקומו מפינה לפינה בבית אחד אינו צריך לחזור ולברך אכל במזרחה של תאנה ובא לאכול במערבה צריך לחזור ולברך:
6
When a person recites a blessing on bread, it also includes the appetizers eaten together with bread - e.g., cooked food or fruit. Reciting a blessing on these foods, however, does not include bread.
Reciting a blessing on cooked grains includes cooked food. Reciting a blessing on cooked food, however, does not include cooked grains.
ו
בירך על הפת פטר את הפרפרת שאוכלין בהן הפת ממיני התבשיל ופירות וכיוצא בהן אבל אם בירך על הפרפרת לא פטר את הפת בירך על מעשה קדירה פטר את התבשיל בירך על התבשיל לא פטר את מעשה קדירה:
Commentary on Halachah 6
7
A person who decides not to continue eating or drinking, and afterwards changes his mind and [desires to] eat or drink, must recite another blessing although he has not changed his place. If he did not decide [to cease] eating or drinking and had in mind to continue - even if he made an interruption for the entire day - he is not required to recite a second blessing.
ז
גמר בלבו מלאכול או מלשתות ואח"כ נמלך לאכול או לשתות אף ע"פ שלא שינה מקומו חוזר ומברך ואם לא גמר בלבו אלא דעתו לחזור לאכול ולשתות אפילו פסק כל היום כולו אינו צריך לברך שנית:
Commentary on Halachah 7
8
When people who are sitting together and drinking say "Let us recite grace," or "Let us recite kiddush," they are forbidden to continue drinking until they recite grace or kiddush. Should they desire to drink more - although they are not permitted to do so - before reciting grace or kiddush, they are required to recite the blessing borey pri hagafen before drinking. In contrast, should they say, "Let us recite havdalah," they are not required to recite a blessing [should they continue drinking].
ח
היו שותין ואמרו בואו ונברך ברכת המזון או בואו ונקדש קידוש היום נאסר עליהם לשתות עד שיברכו או יקדשו ואם רצו לחזור ולשתות קודם שיברכו או יקדשו אף ע"פ שאינם רשאים צריכים לחזור ולברך תחלה בורא פרי הגפן ואחר כך ישתו אבל אם אמרו בואו ונבדיל אין צריכין לחזור ולברך:
Commentary on Halachah 8
9
When a company who gathered together to drink wine were served another type of wine - e.g., they were drinking red wine and black wine was brought, or they were drinking fresh wine and aged wine was brought - they need not recite a second blessing over wine. They should, however, recite the following blessing: "Blessed are You, God, our Lord, King of the universe, who is good and does good."
ט
היו מסובין לשתות יין ובא להן מין יין אחר כגון שהיו שותין אדום והביאו שחור או ישן והביאו חדש אינן צריכין לברך ברכת היין פעם שנייה אבל מברכין ברוך אתה יי' אלהינו מלך העולם הטוב והמטיב:
10
A person should not recite a blessing over any food or drink until it is brought before him. If he recited a blessing, and then the food was brought before him, he must recite a second blessing.
When a person took food in his hand and recited a blessing, but [before he could eat it] it fell from his hand and was burned or washed away by a river, he should take other food and recite another blessing. [This applies] even when the food is of the same species. He should also say, "Blessed be the Name of Him whose glorious kingdom is forever and ever" for the first blessing, so that he will not be considered to have recited a blessing in vain.
A person may stand over a stream of water, recite a blessing, and drink. Although the water that was before him at the time he recited the blessing is not the water he drinks, this was his original intention.
י
אין מברכין על אוכל מן כל האוכלין ולא על משקה מן כל המשקין עד שיבא לפניו ואם בירך ואח"כ הביאו לפניו צריך לחזור ולברך נטל אוכל ובירך עליו ונפל מידו ונשרף או שטפו נהר נוטל אחר וחוזר ומברך עליו אע"פ שהוא מאותו המין וצריך לומר ברוך שם כבוד מלכותו לעולם ועד על ברכה ראשונה כדי שלא להוציא שם שמים לבטלה עומד אדם על אמת המים ומברך ושותה אף על פי שהמים שהיו לפניו בשעת הברכה אינם המים ששתה מפני שלכך נתכוון תחלה:
Commentary on Halachah 10
11
Foods that are eaten within the meal, because of the meal, do not require a blessing beforehand or afterward. Rather, the blessing hamotzi that is recited in the beginning and the grace recited afterward include everything, because everything is secondary to the meal.
Foods that are eaten within the meal, but do not come because of the meal, require a blessing before partaking of them, but do not require a blessing afterward.
Foods that are eaten after the meal, whether because of the meal or independent of the meal, require a blessing beforehand and afterward.
יא
דברים הבאים בתוך הסעודה והן מחמת הסעודה אינן צריכין ברכה לפניהם ולא לאחריהם אלא ברכת המוציא שבתחלה וברכת המזון שבסוף פוטרת הכל שהכל טפלה לסעודה ודברים שאינן מחמת הסעודה שבאו בתוך הסעודה טעונין ברכה לפניהם ולא לאחריהם ודברים הבאים לאחר הסעודה בין מחמת הסעודה בין שלא מחמת הסעודה טעונין ברכה לפניהן ולאחריהם:
Commentary on Halachah 11
12
On Sabbaths, on festivals, at the meal after one lets blood or leaves the bath, and the like, when a person makes wine a primary element of his meal, if he recites a blessing on wine before eating his meal, that blessing includes the wine that he drinks after the meal, before he recites grace. In contrast, on other days, a person should recite another blessing on wine that is drunk after the meal.
If wine is served to a company in the midst of the meal, each person should recite a blessing by himself, because one's mouth may not be empty to recite Amen. [This blessing] does not include the wine that is drunk after the meal.
יב
בשבתות ובימים טובים ובסעודת הקזת הדם ובשעה שיצא מן המרחץ וכיוצא בהן שאדם קובע סעודתו על היין אם בירך על היין שלפני המזון פטר את היין ששתה לאחר המזון קודם שיברך ברכת המזון אבל בשאר הימים צריך לחזור ולברך בתחלה על היין של אחר המזון בא להן יין בתוך המזון כל אחד ואחד מברך לעצמו שאין בית הבליעה פנוי שיענו אמן ואינו פוטר את היין שלאחר המזון:
Berachot - Chapter Five
1
Women and slaves are obligated to recite grace. There is a doubt whether their obligation stems from the Torah, since [this is a positive mitzvah] that is not linked to a specific time, or whether their obligation does not stem from the Torah. Therefore, they should not fulfill the obligation of grace on behalf of others. Children, however, are obligated to recite grace by virtue of Rabbinic decree, in order to educate them to perform mitzvot.
א
נשים ועבדים חייבין בברכת המזון וספק יש בדבר אם הן חייבין מן התורה לפי שאין קבוע לה זמן או אינם חייבין מן התורה לפיכך אין מוציאין את הגדולים ידי חובתן אבל הקטנים חייבין בברכת המזון מדברי סופרים כדי לחנכן במצות:
Commentary on Halachah 1
2
When three people eat [a meal including] bread together, they are obligated to recite the blessing of zimmun before grace.
What is the blessing of zimmun? If there were between three and ten participants in a meal, one recites the blessing, saying, "Let us bless Him of whose [bounty] we have eaten."
Everyone responds: "Blessed be He of whose [bounty] we have eaten and by whose goodness we live." The one [reciting the blessing] then repeats: "Blessed be He of whose [bounty] we have eaten and by whose goodness we live."
ב
שלשה שאכלו פת כאחד חייבין לברך ברכת הזימון קודם ברכת המזון ואי זו היא ברכת הזימון אם היו האוכלים משלשה עד עשרה מברך אחד מהם ואומר נברך שאכלנו משלו והכל עונין ברוך שאכלנו משלו ובטובו חיינו והוא חוזר ומברך ברוך שאכלנו משלו ובטובו חיינו:
3
Afterwards, he recites, "Blessed are You, God, our Lord, King of the universe, who sustains the entire world in His goodness..." until he completes the four blessings [of grace]. The others answer Amen after each blessing.
ג
ואח"כ אומר ברוך אתה יי' אלהינו מלך העולם הזן את העולם כולו בטובו עד שגומר ארבע ברכות והן עונין אמן אחר כל ברכה וברכה:
4
If ten or more people eat together, the zimmun should be recited with God's name. What is implied? The one reciting the blessing declares, "Let us bless to our God of whose [bounty] we have eaten."
The others respond: "Blessed be our God of whose [bounty] we have eaten and by whose goodness we live." The one [reciting the blessing] then repeats: "Blessed be our God of whose [bounty] we have eaten and by whose goodness we live." He then begins reciting grace.
ד
היו האוכלין מעשרה ולמעלה מזמנין בשם כיצד המברך אומר נברך לאלהינו שאכלנו משלו והן עונין ברוך אלהינו שאכלנו משלו ובטובו חיינו והוא חוזר ואומר ברוך אלהינו שאכלנו משלו ובטובו חיינו ומתחיל ברכת המזון:
5
When eating in the home of a bridegroom from the time when the preparations for the wedding feast have begun until 30 days after the wedding, the one reciting the blessings should say, "Let us bless Him in whose abode is joy, of whose bounty we have eaten," and the others respond, "Blessed be He in whose abode is joy, of whose bounty we have eaten...."
If ten people are present, he says, "Let us bless our God in whose abode is joy, of whose bounty we have eaten..." and the others respond, "Blessed be our God in whose abode is joy, of whose bounty we have eaten...." Similarly, whenever a feast is held because of the wedding for twelve months after the wedding, one should include the phrase, "in whose abode is joy."
ה
הסועד בבית חתנים משיתחילו להתעסק בצרכי סעודת נישואין ולהכינה עד שלשים יום אחר הנישואין מברך נברך שהשמחה במעונו שאכלנו משלו והם עונים ברוך שהשמחה במעונו שאכלנו משלו וכו' ואם היו עשרה מברך נברך לאלהינו שהשמחה במעונו שאכלנו משלו והם עונין ברוך אלהינו שהשמחה וכו' וכן סעודה שעושין אותה אחר הנישואין מחמת הנישואין עד שנים עשר חדש מברך שהשמחה במעונו:
6
All men are obligated in the blessing of the zimmun as they are obligated in grace, even priests who partook of sacrifices of the most sacred order in the Temple Courtyard. Similarly, priests and Israelites who ate together are required to recite the zimmun as they are required to recite grace, although the priests partook of terumah and the Israelites ordinary food.
ו
הכל חייבין בברכת הזימון כדרך שחייבין בברכת המזון אפילו כהנים שאכלו קדשי הקדשים בעזרה וכן כהנים וישראלים שאכלו כאחד ואכלו הכהנים תרומה וישראל חולין חייבין בזימון כחיובן בברכת המזון:
7
Women, servants, and children are not included in azimmun. They may, however, make a zimmun among themselves. Nevertheless, for the sake of modesty, there should not be a company that consists of women, servants, and children [together]. Instead, women may make a zimmun alone, as may servants and as may children. They should not, however, mention God's name.
An androgynous may make a zimmun among his own kind, but should not be included among a zimmun either of men or of women. A tumtum should not be included in a zimmun at all.
A child who understands Whom is being blessed may be included in a zimmun, although he is merely seven or eight years old. He may be counted among either a group of three or a group of ten for the purpose of zimmun. A gentile may not be included in a zimmun.
ז
נשים ועבדים וקטנים אין מזמנין עליהן אבל מזמנין לעצמן ולא תהא חבורה של נשים ועבדים וקטנים מפני הפריצות אבל נשים מזמנות לעצמן או עבדים לעצמן ובלבד שלא יזמנו בשם אנדרוגינוס מזמן למינו ואינו מזמן לא לנשים ולא לאנשים מפני שהוא ספק והטומטום אינו מזמן כלל קטן היודע למי מברכין מזמנין עליו ואע"פ שהוא כבן שבע או כבן שמונה ומצטרף בין למנין שלשה בין למנין עשרה לזמן עליו והעכו"ם אין מזמנין עליו:
Commentary on Halachah 7
8
Only those who ate at least an amount of bread equal to the size of an olive should be included in a zimmun.
When seven people partake of bread and three eat vegetables or brine and the like with them, the latter may be included in the zimmun, so that God's name may be mentioned, provided the one reciting the blessings partook of bread. In contrast, should six people partake of bread and four eat vegetables, the latter may not be included. There has to be a distinct majority of people who partook of bread.
When does the above apply? With regard to [a zimmun of] ten. Regarding three, however, they should not recite the zimmun unless each one of them eats a portion of bread the size of an olive.
ח
אין מזמנין אלא על מי שאכל כזית פת ולמעלה שבעה שאכלו פת ושלשה אכלו עמהן ירק או ציר וכיוצא בהן מצטרפין לזמן בשם והוא שיהיה המברך מאוכלי הפת אבל ששה שאכלו פת וארבעה ירק אין מצטרפין עד שיהיו אוכלי הפת רוב הניכר בד"א בעשרה אבל בשלשה צריך שיאכלו כל אחד ואחד מהן כזית פת ואחר כך מזמנין:
9
[The following rule applies when] two people eat together and complete their meal, and afterward, a third person comes and eats. If the others can eat any food [- they need not partake of bread -] together with him, he should be included [in the zimmun] with them.
The sage of the greatest stature among those dining should recite grace, although he arrived at the end of the meal.
ט
שנים שאכלו וגמרו מלאכול ובא שלישי ואכל אם יכולין לאכול עמו כל שהוא ואפילו משאר אוכלין מצטרף עמהן וחכם גדול שבמסובין הוא שמברך לכולן אף על פי שלא בא אלא באחרונה:
10
When three people eat together, they may not separate [and recite grace without a zimmun]. The same applies to four and five people. Between six and ten people may separate [and recite grace in two groups].
If more then ten people are present, they may not separate until [their number reaches] twenty. [The governing principle is that a group may separate only if] the blessing of the zimmun will be the same for both groups if they separate.
י
שלשה שאכלו כאחד אינן רשאין ליחלק וכן ארבעה וכן חמשה וששה יש להם ליחלק עד עשרה מעשרה ולמעלה אינם רשאים ליחלק עד עשרים שכל זמן שיחלקו ותהיה ברכת הזימון לכל חלק וחלק כזימון הכל יש להם ליחלק:
11
When three people who each came from a different group of three [join together], they should not separate [without reciting grace with a zimmun]. If each of them already participated in a zimmun, they may separate. They are not obligated to participate in a zimmun again, because a zimmun was already recited including them.
When three people sit down [together] to eat bread, they may not separate even though each person eats from his own food.
יא
שלשה בני אדם שבאו משלש חבורות של שלשה שלשה אינן רשאין ליחלק ואם כבר זימן כל אחד ואחד מהן בחבורה שלו רשאין ליחלק ואינן חייבין בזימון שכבר זימנו עליהן שלשה שישבו לאכול פת אע"פ שכל אחד ואחד אוכל משלו אינן רשאין ליחלק:
Commentary on Halachah 11
12
[The following rules apply when] two groups eat together in the same building: When part of one group can see part of the other group, they may join together in a single zimmun. If not, they should each recite a zimmun separately.
If there is a single attendant who serves both of these groups, they may join in a single zimmun, even though none of the people in the two groups see each other, provided both groups can clearly hear the words of the person reciting the blessings.
יב
שתי חבורות שהיו אוכלין בבית אחד בזמן שמקצתן רואין אלו את אלו מצטרפין לזימון אחד ואם לאו אלו מזמנין לעצמן ואלו מזמנין לעצמן ואם יש שמש אחד ביניהם שהוא הולך ומשמש מחבורה זו לחבורה זו מצטרפין לזימון אחד אף על פי שאין מקצת אלו רואין את אלו והוא שישמעו שתיהן כל דברי המברך בביאור:
13
When three people ate together and one went out to the marketplace, he should be called to pay attention to what they are saying. He may be included in the zimmun while he is at the marketplace, and thus fulfill his obligation. Afterwards, when he returns to his house, he should recite grace alone. In contrast, when ten people eat together and one goes out to the market place, the zimmun may not be recited until he returns to his place.
יג
שלשה שאכלו ויצא אחד מהן לשוק קוראין לו כדי שיכוין לשמוע מה שהן אומרים ומזמנין עליו והוא בשוק ויוצא ידי חובתו ולכשיחזור לביתו יחזור ויברך ברכת המזון לעצמו אבל עשרה שאכלו ויצא אחד מהן לשוק אין מזמנין עליו עד שיחזור למקומו וישב עמהן:
14
When three people eat together and one recites grace alone before the others, the zimmun can be recited with him and the other two fulfill their obligation. He, however, is not considered to have fulfilled his obligation, because the zimmun cannot be fulfilled retroactively.
יד
שלשה שאכלו כאחד וקדם אחד מהן ובירך לעצמו מזמנין עליו ויצאו השנים ידי חובת זימון והוא לא יצא בזימון זה שאין זימון למפרע:
15
When two people eat together, each person should recite grace by himself. If one knows [how to recite grace] and the other does not, the one who knows should recite the grace out loud, and the other person should recite Amen after each blessing. In this manner, he fulfills his obligation.
A son may recite grace for his father, a servant for his master, and a woman for her husband - and thus enable the person to fulfill his obligation. Nevertheless, our Sages said, "May a curse come on a person whose wife or children recite grace for him."
טו
שנים שאכלו כאחד כל אחד ואחד מברך לעצמו ואם היה אחד מהן יודע ואחד אינו יודע זה שיודע מברך בקול רם והשני עונה אמן אחר כל ברכה וברכה ויוצא ידי חובתו ובן מברך לאביו ועבד מברך לרבו ואשה מברכת לבעלה ויוצאין ידי חובתן אבל אמרו חכמים תבא מארה למי שאשתו ובניו מברכין לו:
16
When do the statements that [it is possible to] fulfill one's obligation [in this manner] apply? When they have not eaten to the point of satiation. Therefore, their obligation is only Rabbinic in origin, and can be fulfilled by [listening to] a minor, a servant, or a woman.
If, however, they ate to the point of satisfaction, and thus are obligated according to the Torah itself to recite grace, they cannot fulfill their obligation by [listening to] either a woman, a minor, or a servant. Anyone who is obligated according to the Torah to perform a mitzvah can have his obligation fulfilled only by another person who is also obligated from the Torah [to fulfill this mitzvah] as he is.
טז
במה דברים אמורים שיצאו ידי חובתן בזמן שאכלו ולא שבעו שהן חייבים לברך מדברי סופרים ולפיכך מוציאין אותן קטן או עבד או אשה מידי חובתן אבל אם אכל ושבע שהוא חייב בברכת המזון מן התורה בין אשה בין קטן או עבד אין מוציאין אותן שכל החייב בדבר מן התורה אין מוציאין אותן מידי חובתן אלא החייב באותו דבר מן התורה כמותו:
17
[The following rules apply when] a person enters [a room where] others are reciting the blessing of zimmun]: If he [enters when] the person reciting the blessings says, "Let us recite grace," he should respond, "Blessed is He, and may He be blessed." If he [enters when] the others reply, he should say Amen afterward.
יז
הנכנס אצל אחרים ומצאן מברכין בברכת הזימון אם מצא המברך אומר נברך הוא עונה ברוך הוא ומבורך ואם מצא האוכלים עונין ברוך שאכלנו משלו הוא עונה אחריהן אמן:
Berachot - Chapter Six
1
Anyone who eats bread over which the blessing hamotzi is recited must wash his hands before and after partaking of it.This applies even when the bread one eats is not sacred food.
Although a person's hands are not dirty, nor is he aware that they have contracted any type of ritual impurity, he should not eat until he washes both his hands. Similarly, before [partaking of] any food dipped in liquid, one must wash one's hands.
א
כל האוכל הפת שמברכין עליו המוציא צריך נטילת ידים תחלה וסוף ואע"פ שהיא פת חולין ואף על פי שאין ידיו מלוכלכות ואינו יודע להן טומאה לא יאכל עד שיטול שתי ידיו וכן כל דבר שטיבולו במשקין צריך נטילת ידים תחילה:
Commentary on Halachah 1
2
Whenever a person washes his hands - whether before eating, before the recitation of the Shema, or before prayer - he should recite the following blessing beforehand: "[Blessed are You...] who sanctified us with His commandments and commanded us concerning the washing of hands."
This is a Rabbinic mitzvah that we have been commanded by the Torah to follow, as [Deuteronomy 17:11] states: "[Do not stray...] from all the laws that they direct you." A blessing should not, however, be recited before washing after eating, for this was instituted only as a protective measure. This rationale, however, obligates a person to be more careful in the observance of this practice.
ב
כל הנוטל ידיו בין לאכילה בין לקריאת שמע בין לתפלה מברך תחלה אשר קדשנו במצותיו וצונו על נטילת ידים שזו מצות חכמים שנצטוינו מן התורה לשמוע מהן שנאמר על פי התורה אשר יורוך ומים אחרונים אין מברכין עליהן שאינם אלא מפני הסכנה ולפיכך חייב אדם להזהר בהן ביותר:
Commentary on Halachah 2
3
Washing hands between one course and another is a matter of choice. If one desires, one may wash; if not, one need not.
There is no obligation to wash before partaking of unconsecrated fruit, whether before eating or afterward. [On the contrary,] whoever washes his hands before partaking of fruit is considered among the haughty.
Whenever bread [is eaten] with salt, it is necessary to wash one's hands afterward, lest it contain Sodomite salt or salt that resembles Sodomite salt, and [after eating,] one [inadvertently] pass one's hands over one's eyes and blind them. This - [the possibility of acrid] salt - is the reason why we are obligated to wash after eating.
In an army camp, [the soldiers] are not obligated to wash before eating, because they are involved in the war. They are, however, obligated to wash afterwards because of the danger involved.
ג
נטילת ידים בין תבשיל לתבשיל רשות רצה נוטל רצה אינו נוטל ופירות של חולין אינן צריכין נטילת ידים בין בתחלה בין בסוף וכל הנוטל ידיו לפירות הרי זה מגסי הרוח כל פת שהמלח בו צריך נטילת ידים באחרונה שמא יש בו מלח סדומית או מלח שטבעו כמלח סדומית ויעביר ידיו על עיניו ויסמא מפני זה חייבין ליטול ידים בסוף כל סעודה מפני המלח ובמחנה פטורים מנטילת ידים בתחלה מפני שהן טרודים במלחמה וחייבין באחרונה מפני הסכנה:
4
To what point should one's hands be washed? To the wrist. How much water should be used? A [minimum of a] revi'it for each pair of hands.
Anything that is considered an intervening substance [and thus invalidates] a ritual immersion is also considered an intervening substance with regard to washing hands. All liquids that may be included in the measure of a mikveh may be included in the measure of the revi'it [necessary for the washing of hands].
ד
עד היכן היא נטילת ידים עד הפרק וכמה שיעור המים רביעית לכל שתי ידים וכל שחוצצים בטבילה חוצץ בנטילת ידים וכל העולה למדת מקוה עולה לשיעור רביעית:
Commentary on Halachah 4
5
Whoever had to wash his hands and [instead] immersed them in the water of a mikveh need not do anything else. If he immersed them in a body of water that does not have the required measure of a mikveh, or in water that has been poured onto the ground, he has not accomplished anything. Water that is poured [by man] can purify hands only when it is poured over them.
ה
כל הצריך נטילת ידים והטביל ידיו במי מקוה אינו צריך דבר אחר ואם הטבילן במים שאין בהם שיעור מקוה או במים שאובין שבקרקע לא עשה כלום שאין המים שאובין מטהרין את הידים אלא בנטילה:
6
Everyone who washes his hands must show concern for four matters:
the water itself - that it not be unacceptable for washing hands,
its measure - that there be a revi'it for each pair of hands,
the container - that one wash from a container,
the individual pouring - that the water come from the power of a person who pours it.
ו
כל הנוטל ידיו צריך להזהר בארבעה דברים:
במים עצמן שלא יהיו פסולין לנטילת ידים ובשיעור שיהיה בהן רביעית לכל שתי ידים ובכלי שיהיו המים שנוטלין בהן בכלי ובנוטל שיהיו המים באין מכח נותן:
7
There are four matters that render water unacceptable: a change in its color, its being left open, its having been used for work, and its becoming spoiled to the point that an animal would not drink from it.
What is implied? Water whose color changes becomes unacceptable whether it is contained [in a pool] in the ground or in a container, or whether it changed because of something that fell into it or because of the place where it is contained.
Similarly, if the water was left uncovered in a manner that causes it to become forbidden to be drunken, it is unacceptable for washing hands.
ז
ארבעה דברים פוסלין את המים שינוי מראה וגלוי ועשיית מלאכה בהן והפסד שמונע את הבהמה מלשתות מהן כיצד מים שנשתנו מראיתן בין בכלים בין בקרקעות בין מחמת דבר שנפל לתוכן בין מחמת מקומן הרי אלו פסולין וכן אם נתגלו גלוי האוסר אותן משתייה נפסלו לנטילת ידים:
8
Any water that was used for a task is considered as sewage water and is unfit to use for washing hands. What is implied? Water that has been drawn from its source, which was used to wash utensils, to dip one's bread in, or the like, whether [it was stored] in a container or [in a pool] in the ground, becomes unacceptable for washing hands.
If one uses the water to wash clean utensils or new ones, it does not becomes unacceptable. Water in which a baker dips crackers is unacceptable. In contrast, water from which [he removes some] to baste the dough when kneading it is acceptable. It is the water that he removes that was used for a task; the water from which he removed it remains acceptable [as before].
ח
כל מים שנעשה בהן מלאכה נעשו שופכין ופסולין לנטילת ידים כיצד מים שאובין שהדיח בהן כלים או ששרה בהם פתו וכיוצא בזה בין בכלים בין בקרקעות פסולין לנטילת ידים הדיח בהן כלים מודחין או חדשים לא פסלן מים שהנחתום מטבל בהן את הכעכים פסולין ושהוא חופן מהן בשעת לישה כשרים שהמים שבחפניו הן שנעשו בהן מלאכה אבל המים שחפן מהם הרי הן בכשרותן:
9
All water that becomes unfit for a dog to drink - e.g., bitter [water], salty [water], very murky [water], foul-smelling [water] - which is contained in a vessel may not be used for washing hands. If [such water] is [contained in a pool] in the ground, one may immerse one's hands in it.
[The following rules apply to] the hot springs of Tiberias. In their [natural] place, one may immerse one's hands in them. If, however, one removed them with a container or diverted a stream of them into another place, they may not be used for either the first or the final washing of the hands, because they are not fit for an animal to drink.
ט
וכל מים שנפסלו משתיית כלב כגון שהיו מרים או מלוחים או עכורין או ריח רע עד שלא ישתה מהן הכלב בכלים פסולין לנטילת ידים ובקרקעות כשרים להטביל חמי טבריא במקומן מטבילין בהם את הידים אבל אם נטל מהן בכלי או שהפליג מהן אמה למקום אחר אין נוטלין מהן לא ראשונים ולא אחרונים מפני שאינן ראויין לשתיית בהמה:
10
One may pour water over one's hands a little at a time until one has poured out the entire amount. If, however, one poured out the entire revi'it at one time, it is acceptable.
Four or five people may wash with a single pouring while they are standing next to each other or with their hands above each other's, provided:
a) they leave space between their hands for the water to enter, and
b) there is enough water in that pouring to provide each one with a revi'it.
י
יש לנוטל ליתן על ידיו מעט מעט עד שיתן כשיעור ואם נתן הרביעית כולה בשטיפה אחת כשר נוטלין ארבעה או חמשה זה בצד זה או יד זה על גבי זה בשטיפה אחת ובלבד שירפו ידיהן כדי שיבא ביניהן המים ויהיה באותה השטיפה כדי רביעית לכל אחד ואחד:
11
One may not use the following to wash one's hands: the sides of vessels, the base of a samovar, pieces of earthenware, or the covering of a jug. Should one modify such a covering to use for washing, it is acceptable. Similarly, a wine-pouch that was modified may be used for the washing of hands.
In contrast, a sack or a basket - [although] they have been modified - may not be used to wash hands. One may not hold water in one's hands and pour it over a colleague's [hands], because one's hands are not a vessel.
Vessels that have been broken to the extent that the laws of ritual impurity no longer apply to them may not be used to wash hands, because they are considered to be broken vessels.
יא
אין נוטלין מים לידים לא בדפנות הכלים ולא בשולי המחץ ולא בחרסים ולא במגופת החבית ואם תיקן המגופה לנטילה נוטלין ממנה לידים וכן החמת שתיקנה נוטלין ממנה לידים אבל שק וקופה שנתקנו אין נוטלין מהן לידים ולא יתן לחבירו בחפניו שאין חפניו כלי וכלים שנשברו שבירה המטהרת אותן מידי טומאה אין נותנין בהם לידים מפני שהן שברי כלים:
Commentary on Halachah 11
12
All vessels, even those made from cow dung or earth, may be used to wash hands, provided they are whole.
A vessel that cannot contain a revi'it or a vessel that does not contain a revi'it may not be used for the washing of hands.
יב
בכל הכלים נוטלים לידים ואפילו כלי גללים וכלי אדמה והוא שיהיו שלמים כלי שאינו מחזיק רביעית או אין בו רביעית אין נותנין ממנה לידים:
Commentary on Halachah 12
13
All people are acceptable to pour water over one's hands, even a deaf-mute, a mentally incapable person, or a minor. If no one else is present, one should hold the vessel between one's knees, and thus pour it out over one's hands; lean a jug over so that the water will fall out over one's hands; or pour the water over each of one's hands individually.
It is acceptable if a monkey pours water over one's hands.
יג
הכל כשרין ליתן לידים אפילו חרש שוטה וקטן אם אין שם אחר מניח הכלי בין ברכיו וצק על ידיו או יטה החבית על ידיו ויטול או נוטל ידו אחת וצק בזו על זו וחוזר וצק בראשונה על השנייה והקוף נוטל לידים:
14
When a person pours water into a trough by hand or by using a pulley, and afterwards the water flows out from it through an irrigation channel that brings the water to vegetables or to animals, it is not acceptable for one to place one's hands in the trough and have the water pass over them, because the water is not coming from "the power of a giver." If one's hands were close to the place where the bucket is poured out so that the water passes over one's hands because of the power of a human being, the washing is acceptable.
יד
השוקת שדולה אדם בידו או בגלגל ונותן לתוכה והמים נמשכין ממנה באמה והולכין ומשקין הירקות או הבהמה והניח ידיו בשוקת ועברו המים ושטפו על ידיו לא עלתה לו נטילה שהרי אין כאן נותן על ידיו ואם היו ידיו קרובות לשפיכת הדלי עד שנמצאו המים שטפו על ידיו מכח נתינת האדם עלתה לו נטילה:
15
When there is a doubt with regard to the water [used to wash one's hands] - e.g., whether it had been used for other tasks or not, whether it contained the required quantity or not, whether it [the water itself] is ritually pure or not, and, similarly, when a person has a doubt whether he washed his hands or not, [in all these instances,] his hands are considered to be pure. In all instances where doubt arises concerning the ritual purity of hands, the hands are considered to be pure.
טו
מים שנסתפק לו אם נעשה מהן מלאכה או לא נעשה אם יש בהן כשיעור או שאין בהן אם הן טהורין או טמאין ספק נטל ידיו ספק לא נטל ידיו ספיקו טהור שכל ספק שבטהרת ידים טהור:
16
When washing before eating, a person should raise his hands upward so that that water will not flow past the wrist, and then return and make the hands impure. In contrast, when washing after eating, a person should hold his hands downward so that all the power of the salt should be rinsed away off one's hands.
Before eating, one may wash into a container or onto the ground. After eating, one should wash only into a container. Before eating, one may wash with hot water or with cold water. After eating, one should not wash with hot water - i.e., water that will scald one's hands. It will not [serve the purpose of] removing filth, because one cannot rub one's hands together with it. If the water is merely warm, it may be used for washing after eating.
טז
מים הראשונים צריך שיגביה ידיו למעלה עד שלא יצאו מים חוץ לפרק ויחזרו ויטמאו את הידים ואחרונים צריך שישפיל ידיו למטה כדי שיצא כל כח המלח מעל ידיו מים ראשונים ניטלים בין על גבי כלי בין על גבי קרקע ואחרונים אינן ניטלין אלא על גבי כלי מים ראשונים ניטלין בין בחמי האור בין בצונן ואחרונים אינן ניטלין בחמין והוא שיהיו חמים שהיד סולדת בהן מפני שאין מעבירין את הזוהמא שאינו יכול לשפשף בהן אבל היו פושרין נוטלין מהן באחרונה:
17
A person may wash his hands in the morning and stipulate that [the washing will be effective] for the entire day. Thus, he will not have to wash before each time he eats. [This rule applies] only when he does not divert his attention from his hands. If, however, he diverts his attention from them, he must wash them whenever it is required.
יז
נוטל אדם ידיו שחרית ומתנה עליהן כל היום ואינו צריך ליטול את ידיו לכל אכילה ואכילה והוא שלא יסיח דעתו מהן אבל אם הסיח דעתו מהן צריך ליטול ידיו בכל עת שצריך נטילה:
18
A person may wrap his hands in a cloth and eat bread or food dipped in liquid although he did not wash his hands.
A person who feeds others need not wash his hands. The person who eats, however, must wash his hands, although another person puts food into his mouth and he does not touch the food at all. Similarly, a person who eats with a fork must wash his hands.
יח
לט אדם את ידיו במפה ואוכל בהן פת או דבר שטיבולו במשקה אע"פ שלא נטל ידיו המאכיל לאחרים אינו צריך נטילת ידים והאוכל צריך נטילת ידים אף על פי שאחר נותן לתוך פיו ואינו נוגע במאכל והוא הדין לאוכל במגריפה שצריך נטילת ידים:
19
It is forbidden to feed someone who did not wash his hands even if one puts the food directly into his mouth.
It is forbidden to treat the washing of hands with disdain. Our Sages have authored many commands and warnings about this manner. Even when one has a minimum amount of water to drink, one should wash one's hands with a portion, eat, and drink the remainder.
יט
אסור להאכיל מי שלא נטל ידיו ואף על פי שהוא נותן לתוך פיו ואסור לזלזל בנטילת ידים וצוויים הרבה צוו חכמים והזהירו על הדבר אפילו אין לו מים אלא כדי שתייה נוטל ידיו במקצתן ואחר כך אוכל ושותה מקצתן:
20
[After washing,] a person must dry his hands before eating. Anyone who eats without drying his hands is considered to have eaten impure bread.
Similarly, whenever a person washes his hands after eating, he should dry them and then recite grace. One should recite grace directly after washing one's hands. No interruptions should be made. It is even forbidden to drink water after washing one's hands after eating until one recites grace.
כ
צריך אדם לנגב את ידיו ואח"כ יאכל וכל האוכל בלא ניגוב ידים כאוכל לחם טמא וכל הנוטל ידיו באחרונה מנגב ואח"כ מברך ותכף לנטילת ידים ברכת המזון לא יפסיק ביניהם בדבר אחר אפילו לשתות מים אחר שנוטל ידיו באחרונה אסור עד שיברך ברכת המזון:
Hayom Yom:
• English Text | Video Class
Shabbat, Cheshvan 8, 5778 · 10/28/2017
"Today's Day"
Shabbat, Cheshvan 8, 5704
Torah lessons: Chumash: Lech L'cha, Shevi'i with Rashi.
Tehillim: 44-48.
Tanya: R. Isaac Luria (p. 557) ...side of evil." (p. 559).
Mitzva is an idiom of tzavta - "joining," "attachment." Whoever performs a mitzva becomes joined to the Essence of G-d - may He be blessed - Who issues that particular command. This is the meaning of "The reward of a mitzva is the mitzva (itself)":1 His becoming attached to the Essence of the En Sof Who ordained the command, is itself his reward.
The above can be understood through an analogy from the physical world: An extremely simple person has an inner sense of bitul (nullity) before the wisdom and greatness of a scholar - a bitul in which he senses himself to be an utter nonentity. The sage in turn,2 does not sense or perceive the simpleton as belonging at all to the category of human beings! Not that the scholar dismisses or rejects him, G-d forbid, for that would be an evil trait; he simply sees no connection or relationship with him whatsoever.
Now, when the sage instructs the simple man to do something for him, that command brings the simpleton "into being." In his own self-perception he is no longer a nonentity but a "somebody"; he has assumed a status unto himself in that he is able to carry out an order of the sage, and it is him that the sage addressed and instructed. In the eyes of the sage too, the simpleton now "exists"; he is a "somebody" to whom he (the sage) can speak and instruct. What is more, the command actually unites the lofty, exalted sage with the gross simpleton. The analogue is obvious.
It is understood that in the above analogy there is no difference at all what the command is about, whether a great, lofty matter or a simple trivial one.
FOOTNOTES
1.Avot 4:2.
2.Whose universe is scholarship and intellect.
Daily Thought:
The Quantum Leap
There are times when moving forward step by step is not enough.
There are times when you can’t just change what you do, how you speak and how you think about things.
Sometimes, you have to change who you are. You need to pick both feet off the ground and leap.
Sometimes, you need to change at your very core of being. (Public Letter for Passover, Rosh Chodesh Nissan 5736.)
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