For the source text click/tap here: Zevachim 76
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Abaye asked on Rava from the following braisa: Rabbi Shimon said [concerning one who is uncertain if he is obligated in the metzora sacrifices for he was a confirmed metzora who has now recovered, or was he merely confined and he is not required in any sacrifices]: On the next morning he brings his asham offering together with the log of oil and stipulates, “If this is a metzora’s offering, this is his (my) asham and this is its log, but if not, then this asham should be a donated shelamim.”
That asham must be slaughtered in the north (like an asham) and requires sprinkling of its blood on the thumbs (like a metzora’s asham), and semichah, libations and the waving of the breast and the thigh (like a shelamim); and it is eaten one day and one night (like an asham). [Evidently, Rabbi Shimon is not concerned about shortening the amount of time that the korban may be eaten!?] The Gemora answers: A person’s remedy is different (in order for him to become tahor).
We explore the log shemen (measured portion of oil) in the metzora purification ritual of Leviticus 14, situating this biblical practice within the broader ancient Near Eastern context of ritual oil use and its metapsychological functions.
