Julian Ungar-Sargon

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Daf Ditty

A wide-ranging commentary on the daily page of Talmud.

Menachot 99: מְלַמֵּד שֶׁהַלּוּחוֹת וְשִׁבְרֵי לוּחוֹת מוּנָּחִין בָּאָרוֹן

jyungar April 20, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 99

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Replacement of the loaves was essential because the Torah commands that the loaves be placed before God tamid – “always” – (see Ex 25:30).

Rabbi Yosei disagrees with this understand of tamid, arguing that even if the loaves were removed in the morning and replaced in the evening, it would still fulfill the requirement of tamid, which should be understood as teaching that a night should not pass without Shewbread on the table.

Rabbi Ami infers from Rabbi Yosei’s teaching that the concept of tamid – “always” – need not be understood as requiring 24 hour vigilance, and applies it to other situations, as well.

Specifically, he says that Torah study, which is a requirement “day and night” (see Yehoshua 1:8) can be fulfilled by studying a chapter in the morning and a chapter at night.

Reish Lakish teaches that one who forgets even one thing from his learning transgresses the Torah prohibition of, "Rak Hishamer Lecha... Pen Tishkach Es ha'Devarim" -- "Guard yourself... lest you forget these things" (Devarim 4:9).

The Gemara clearly understands that this verse refers to forgetting Torah. However, the straightforward meaning of the verse is a reference to the giving of the Torah at Har Sinai, when Hashem commanded the Jewish people not to forget the things they saw there.

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Menachot 98: חַד אָמַר: כְּדֵי שֶׁיֵּדְעוּ מֵהֵיכָן בָּאוּ, וְחַד אָמַר: כְּדֵי שֶׁתְּהֵא אֵימַת מַלְכוּת עֲלֵיהֶן

jyungar April 19, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 98

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During the Second Temple period, there were five gates leading to the Temple Mount, two on the Southern Wall and one each on the Western, Eastern and Northern walls. The Mishna in Massekhet Middot (1:3) teaches that the gate on the Eastern side was called “The gate of Shushan” and it was decorated with an engraving of the Persian capital, Shushan.

Two opinions are offered in the Talmudic Sages on our daf to explain why Shushan appeared there. Rav Ḥisda and Rav Yitzḥak bar Avdimi weighed in on this question. According to one it was so that the people would know from whence they came; according to the other it was so that the fear of the ruling government should be upon the people.

We explore the history and archeology of the Shushan gate.

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Menachot 97: שׁוּלְחָנוֹ שֶׁל אָדָם מְכַפֵּר עָלָיו

jyungar April 18, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 97

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Gemara on our daf discusses how the shulḥan which was made of wood that was plated with gold, should be viewed.

To answer this question, the Gemara quotes a passage from the book of Yeḥezkel (41:22) where we find the following description:

“The altar, three cubits high, and the length thereof two cubits, was of wood, and so the corners thereof; the length thereof, and the walls thereof, were also of wood; and he said unto me: ‘This is the table that is before the LORD.'”

This is understood to clarify that the table was viewed as a wooden utensil, even though the wood was not visible.

Having quoted the passage from Sefer Yeḥezkel, the Gemara asks why he began his description by talking about the altar and then finished by talking about the table. In response, both Rabbi Yoḥanan and Rabbi Elazar suggest that this teaches that just as the altar served as the place of atonement when the Temple stood, so our tables serve that purpose today, after the destruction of the Temple.

We explore the use of Ezekiel’s dimensions of the temple and then a dazzling exposition by the Meor Eynayim of שׁוּלְחָנוֹ שֶׁל אָדָם מְכַפֵּר עָלָיו.

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Bowls for the nesachin by the southwest keren of the Mizbeach

Menachot 96: וְהָאִיכָּא קְרָנוֹת

jyungar April 17, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 96

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The table in the Temple served to hold the 12 loaves of the leḥem ha-panim – the Shewbread. On our daf Reish Lakish teaches that the table, together with its loaves, served a unique purpose in the Temple.

Reish Lakish teaches that when the Torah talks about the “pure” table in the Temple (see Vayikra 24:6), it implies that the table could become ritually defiled. This demands explanation, since vessels that cannot be moved are not subject to the laws of ritual purity. He explains that the table was, in fact, moved, since the priests would take the table out of the Temple to show it to the pilgrims who came bringing sacrifices during the holidays. The table was shown to them based on Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi’s teaching that the table showed God’s direct love of the Children of Israel inasmuch as it represented an ongoing miracle – the loaves that were placed on the table at the beginning of the week remained warm and fresh when they were removed and eaten at the end of the week.

With regard to the two loaves, their length is seven handbreadths, their width is four handbreadths, and they have hornlike protrusions made of dough that is attached to each of their corners, which are four fingerbreadths high. With regard to the loaves of shewbread, their length is ten handbreadths, their width is five handbreadths, and each loaf’s hornlike protrusions is seven fingerbreadths high.

We  explore the “horns of the altar” especially in Psalm 118 .״אִסְרוּ חַג בַּעֲבוֹתִים עַד קַרְנוֹת הַמִּזְבֵּחַ״.

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"Ahimelech gives the sword of Goliath to David"Arent de Gelder (1680s)

Menachot 95: לֶחֶם הַפָּנִים הַמּוּסָרִים מִלִּפְנֵי ה׳

jyungar April 17, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 95

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The bread of vision (Lechem hapanim) was kneaded outside the Temple - because vessels did not sanctify the flour - and baked inside the Temple before Shabbat. Rabbi Yehudah disagrees: it was kneaded and baked inside the Temple, on Shabbat, to protect the bread from staying overnight. Rabbi Shimon maintains that both ways are valid. Their proofs are not based on the story of King David and the priestly bread -suffering from- extreme hunger - fleeing from King Saul, he arrives at the priestly city of Nob and requests the shewbread (lechem ha-panim) from Ahimelech the High Priest.

From this charged narrative moment, we follow the reception history of this episode through the Yalkut Shimoni on Samuel and into the sugya of our daf where Rabbis Yehudah and Shimon deploy the same verse from I Samuel to derive diametrically opposed halakhic conclusions regarding whether the oven or the Table constitutes the locus of consecration for the shewbread.. We examine how a narrative about radical need, priestly authority, and sacred transgression becomes the exegetical ground for a fundamental dispute in Temple law.

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Menachot 94: לְמַאן דְּאָמַר כְּמִין סְפִינָה רוֹקֶדֶת

jyungar April 16, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 94

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The eleventh perek of Massekhet Menaḥot begins on our daf and its focus is on two offerings –

Shetei ha-leḥem – the two loaves brought on Shavuot, celebrating the new wheat harvest (see Vayikra 23:17)

Leḥem ha-panim – Shewbread, the 12 loaves placed on the table in the Temple on a weekly basis (see Vayikra 24:5-8)

These two offerings differ from all other menaḥot inasmuch as they are baked in a pan that gives them a specific form and are eaten whole by the kohanim. The majority of the perek is dedicated to the leḥam ha-panim that has many details, both with regard to the loaves themselves as well as the table on which they are placed in the Temple.

The Torah does not describe how they were to be kneaded and baked, nor does it specify what their actual shape should be. Although there is some description of the table, its details are unclear, and we have little information about the utensils that are attached to it.

We explore the connection with Shabbat ChallahThe eleventh perek of Massekhet Menaḥot begins on our daf and its focus is on two offerings –

Shetei ha-leḥem – the two loaves brought on Shavuot, celebrating the new wheat harvest (see Vayikra 23:17)

Leḥem ha-panim – Shewbread, the 12 loaves placed on the table in the Temple on a weekly basis (see Vayikra 24:5-8)

These two offerings differ from all other menaḥot inasmuch as they are baked in a pan that gives them a specific form and are eaten whole by the kohanim. The majority of the perek is dedicated to the leḥam ha-panim that has many details, both with regard to the loaves themselves as well as the table on which they are placed in the Temple.

The Torah does not describe how they were to be kneaded and baked, nor does it specify what their actual shape should be. Although there is some description of the table, its details are unclear, and we have little information about the utensils that are attached to it.

We explore the connection with Shabbat Challah.

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Menachot 93: בִּשְׁלָמָא חֵרֵשׁ שׁוֹטֶה וְקָטָן

jyungar April 14, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 93

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Basically, personal sacrifices require one to lean on them and recite either his guilt or his thanksgiving to God. However, there are some people who are exempt from this requirement. Thus, a deaf-mute, a deranged person, and a minor don't have the requirement of leaning, because they are not legally competent.

In truth, since they cannot even consecrate an offering or bring it of their own free will, they are very rarely in a situation where leaning would be discussed.

There are also categories of people who can bring a sacrifice without leaning altogether, and these include a non-Jew, a slave, an agent, and a woman. The agent of a person cannot perform leaning, because it says "your hand" - and not your agent's hand. A woman is not required to lean on her sacrifice because the Torah said, "sons of Israel," to exclude "daughters of Israel" from the requirement of leaning.

We explore the legal ramifications of deafness in antiquity and after…

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Menachot 92: אֵלּוּ וָאֵלּוּ מְכַפְּרִי בְּוִידּוּי שָׂעִיר הַמִּשְׁתַּלֵּחַ

jyungar April 13, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 92

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The second half of the tenth perek of Massekhet Menaḥot focuses on the laws of semikha – laying of hands on the sacrifice. The Mishna on our daf teaches that no communal sacrifices include semikha, except for the unique se’ir ha-mishtale’aḥ – the goat sent off to Azazel as part of the Yom Kippur service – and the par ha’alem davar shel tzibbur – the sacrifice brought by the Sanhedrin when they mistakenly misled the people with an erroneous ruling, leading the community to sin. Rabbi Shimon adds another communal sin offering – the one brought when a mistaken ruling leads the community to commit an act of avoda zara.

Our daf presents a deceptively compact Mishnaic debate concerning which sacrificial categories require semikhah — the laying of hands upon the offering's head — and which are exempt.

Among the exempted categories is the se'ir hamishtaleach, the Yom Kippur scapegoat sent into the wilderness to Azazel, carrying the accumulated transgressions of Israel. We analyze the position attributed to Rabbi Shimon regarding the unique liminal status of the scapegoat relative to communal offerings. We examine the theology of vicarious suffering in rabbinic thought, tracing Amoraic debates from Tannaitic antecedents through the major positions of the Babylonian and Palestinian Amoraic academies.

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Menachot 91: ״אוֹ לָאַיִל״ – לְרַבּוֹת אֶת הַפַּלְגָּס

jyungar April 12, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 91

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All sacrifices – both communal sacrifices and individual sacrifices – are accompanied by wine libations. The source for this is the passages in Sefer Bamidbar (15:1-16) that describes the various sacrifices and how each one comes together with a meal offering and a wine libation. The Gemara then quotes a baraita that examines these pesukim closely and derives a series of halakhot from them regarding the laws of the sacrifices.

One example is the way the Gemara examines the words o la-ayil – “or for a ram” (see pesukim 6-7). The word ayil – ram – is understood as including even the unique sacrifice brought by the kohen gadol on Yom Kippur, in the laws of libations. The word o – “or” – that introduces the ram, is understood as including a palges.

The source for the word palges is found in Greek, where it refers to someone who is no longer a child, but has not yet gained the status of an adult. In our case it refers to an animal that is an “in-between” stage of development. One the one hand, it is more than a year old, so it is no longer a keves – a lamb. On the other hand it is not yet an ayil – a ram – a status that it does not obtain until it is older than 13 months.

We explore the connections once more between Hebrew and Greek loan words.

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Menachot 90: כׇּל הַבָּא בְּמוֹעֲדֵיכֶם טָעוּן נְסָכִים

jyungar April 11, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 90

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Many of the sacrifices that were brought in the Temple were accompanied by wine libations. According to the Mishna on our daf all sacrifices, both communal sacrifices and individual sacrifices, are accompanied by wine libations, with the exception of:

bekhor, a first-born animal that is brought.

ma’aser, the animal that is tithed and brought as a sacrifice.

Pesaḥ, the Pascal sacrifice.

ḥatat, sin offerings.

asham, guilt offerings.

The exceptions to this list are the ḥatat and asham brought by a metzora – someone who suffers from biblical leprosy who recovers and brings sacrifices as part of his process of returning to society.

Since the miraculous victory of the Six Day War in 1967, there has been a great deal of interest in the subject of the halachic permissibility of entering the area popularly known as the Temple Mount. While much ink has already been spilled on this subject and the two sides are well known.

We explore the primary sources on the subject, to state the main opinions of the Rishonim, to chronicle the historical development of the Temple Mount and to clarify the archeological issues and debate.

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Menachot 89: כְּתִיב ״וְנִסְכָּהּ״, וְקָרֵינַן ״וְנִסְכּוֹ״

jyungar April 10, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 89

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As we learned on yesterday’s daf, there were different measuring utensils in the Temple, which served different purposes. The Mishna (88a) teaches that three-and-a-half logim of oil were measured out every day in order to light the menora – the Temple candelabra – as there were seven candlesticks and each one received half of a log of oil.

The Gemara on our daf quotes a baraita that explains the source for this requirement. The Torah commands that the kohanim take oil to light the menora “from evening until morning” (Shemot 27:20-21). This is understood to mean that the amount of oil that should be prepared is enough so that it will burn through the entire night. The Sages then established the appropriate amount of oil to burn for that long is half a log.

The Gemara elaborates on the final proof in the baraita: What is the biblical derivation here? Rabbi Elazar says: There is an ambiguity as to whether the possessive pronoun in the term “and its libation” is referring to the lamb offering or the meal offering, both of which are mentioned previously in the verse. This is due to a disparity between the way the Hebrew word for the term is written and the way it is vocalized.

It is written as veniskah, with the possessive pronoun in the feminine form. This would be referring to the meal offering [minḥa], which is a feminine noun. Accordingly, this means: The libation of the meal offering, and it is referring to the oil that is intermingled in the meal offering. And we read it as venisko, with the possessive pronoun in the masculine form. This would be referring to the lamb offering itself [keves], which is a masculine noun. Accordingly, this means: The libation of the lamb offering, which is a reference to the wine libation that accompanies the lamb offering.

We explore kere/ketiv as a key to understanding masoretic transmission.

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Menachot 88: מְנוֹרָה וְנֵרוֹתֶיהָ בָּאוֹת מִן הַכִּכָּר

jyungar April 9, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 88

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§ Apropos the lamps of the Candelabrum, the Gemara relates that Rabbi Yoḥanan says that Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi says: If there is a lamp whose flame went out during the night, the oilin the lamp is halakhically rendered as ashes and the wick is rendered as ashes, and they may no longer be used. How should the priest act? He removes the ashes, i.e., the oil and wick, from the lamp, and puts new oil and a new wick into it and kindles it.

§ Rav Huna, son of Rav Yehuda, says that Rav Sheshet says: Each lamp of the Candelabrum in the Temple was movable, as the branches holding it were thin and flexible. They could therefore be bent over in order to tip out any ashes, remaining oil, or wicks from the lamps.

We explore the history of the Menorah structure from textual and archeological perspectives§ Apropos the lamps of the Candelabrum, the Gemara relates that Rabbi Yoḥanan says that Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi says: If there is a lamp whose flame went out during the night, the oilin the lamp is halakhically rendered as ashes and the wick is rendered as ashes, and they may no longer be used. How should the priest act? He removes the ashes, i.e., the oil and wick, from the lamp, and puts new oil and a new wick into it and kindles it.

§ Rav Huna, son of Rav Yehuda, says that Rav Sheshet says: Each lamp of the Candelabrum in the Temple was movable, as the branches holding it were thin and flexible. They could therefore be bent over in order to tip out any ashes, remaining oil, or wicks from the lamps.

We explore the history of the Menorah structure from textual and archeological perspectives.

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Menachot 87: עַל חוֹמֹתַיִךְ יְרוּשָׁלִַם

jyungar April 8, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 87

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Our Perek concludes by quoting an additional prophecy of Isaiah concerning the rebuilding of Eretz Yisrael: It is written: “I have set watchmen upon your walls, Jerusalem; they shall never be silent day nor night; those who remind the Lord, take no rest” (Isaiah 62:6). This is referring to the angels appointed by God to bring the redemption. The Gemara asks: What do these watchmen say to remind the Lord? This is what Rava bar Rav Sheila said: They recite the verse: “You will arise and have compassion upon Zion; for it is time to be gracious to her, for the appointed time has come” (Psalms 102:14).

We examine the dialectical tension between catastrophe and hope in two foundational rabbinic texts: Eicha Rabbah (Lamentations Rabbah) and the concluding section of our perek which concerns the angelic watchmen appointed to remind God of the unredeemed condition of Zion.

The watchmen figure in our daf serves as the paradigmatic rabbinic response to catastrophe: an active, liturgically embodied refusal to permit silence in the face of unredeemed suffering, grounded in a theology of divine fidelity that is tested but never abandoned. Eicha Rabbah contributes a theology of divine mourning in which God Himself participates in the grief of Israel, thereby transforming catastrophe from a verdict of abandonment into a site of unexpected intimacy.

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Art by Sefira LightstoneArt by Sefira Lightstone

Menachot 86: אֶלָּא עֵדוּת הוּא לְכׇל בָּאֵי עוֹלָם שֶׁהַשְּׁכִינָה שׁוֹרָה בְּיִשְׂרָאֵל

jyungar April 7, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 86

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The Mishna in Menachot 86a explains that the oil used for the lighting of the ner tamid (menorah) must be from the first drops of oil that drip from the ripest of olives that are pounded.

The oil that emerges when the olives are pressed further with beams or with stones is a lower grade oil which is used for the menachot offerings but is not pure enough for the menorah.

The theological heart of the sugya's treatment of the Menorah lies in Rabbi Shmuel bar Nahmani's interpretation of the word lakh ("for yourself") in Leviticus 24:2. The divine command, "they shall take for yourself refined pounded olive oil," would more naturally be read as an instruction to Moses or Aaron — "take it [on my behalf]" or "take it [as I require]." Rabbi Shmuel bar Nahmani inverts this: the oil is to be brought "for yourself," meaning for Israel's benefit, because God has no need of its light.

Rabbi Zerika's teaching in the name of Rabbi Elazar extends the theological argument from the Menorah to the entire configuration of the sanctuary's furnishings. God declares: "I do not require the Table for eating, nor do I require the Candelabrum for its illumination.”

We explore the theological and mystical meaning of these radical claims.

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View of Herodium from Tekoa

Menachot 85: כָּאן בַּעֲבוּדָה, כָּאן בְּשֶׁאֵינָהּ עֲבוּדָה

jyungar April 6, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 85

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The Talmudic sugya of Menachot 85b opens with an apparently technical discussion of the optimal quality of olive oil for Temple meal offerings (menachot), identifies Tekoa as the premier source of such oil, and then—in a characteristically digressive move—pauses to ask why Joab sent specifically to Tekoa to fetch a wise woman.

The answer, attributed to Rabbi Yochanan, is deceptively simple: because the people of Tekoa are habituated to olive oil, and olive oil engenders wisdom. This explanatory aside is not a detour from the halachic discussion; it is the sugya's mechanism for elevating the city of Tekoa from a geographical designation to a theological-epistemological category.

We explore the hermeneutical moves our daf takes in valorizing the wise woman from Tekoa in II Sam 14.

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Menachot 84: כּוּלֵּיהּ בִּמְנָחוֹת, וְסֵיפָא דִּקְרָא אֲתָאן לְלַחְמֵי תוֹדָה

jyungar April 5, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 84

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The Gemara on our daf quotes a Mishna from Massekhet Bikkurim (1:3) that teaches that bikkurim – first fruits brought to the Temple – are only brought from the seven species of fruit about which Israel is uniquely praised (wheat, barley, grapes, figs, pomegranates, olives and dates – see Devarim 8:8). Even these are limited to quality produce. The Mishna continues and teaches that dates growing in the mountains or produce growing in valleys also cannot be brought as bikkurim.

What if such lower quality fruits were set aside as bikkurim?

Rabbi Yoḥanan teaches that even if these fruits were brought they would not become sanctified; Reish Lakish rules that they would become sanctified, just as lower quality animals brought as sacrifices in the Temple would be acceptable, assuming that they met the basic requirements of a sacrifice.

We focus on the pivotal exegetical ruling attributed to Rav Ashi: כּוּלֵּיהּ בִּמְנָחוֹת, וְסֵיפָא דִּקְרָא אֲתָאן לְלַחְמֵיתוֹדָה—'the entire verse [Numbers 18:13] concerns meal offerings, and with the latter clause of the verse we come specifically to the loaves of a thanks offering.'

This declaration, far from being a mere technical resolution of a textual contradiction, constitutes a fundamental reconstitution of the halakhic architecture of Shavuot. Our sugya reveals how the Rabbis, through a layered system of derashot transformed the agricultural harvest festival into a temporal gateway through which the entire edifice of Temple sacrifice—meal offerings, first fruits, libations—must pass.

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Menachot 83: וְהָכְתִיב ״רֵאשִׁית״? לְמִצְוָה

jyungar April 4, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 83

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The ninth perek of Massekhet Menachot begins on our daf. Its focus is on the materials that are brought as offerings in the Temple that are not animals or fowl, that is, the grain brought in meal offerings, the oil and the wine used as libations. While the Torah does teach what all of these must come from, they lack specific requirements, e.g. whether they must be made from the produce of the Land of Israel or can be brought from imported raw materials.

According to the first Mishna, only the minḥat ha-omer and the shetei ha-leḥem (the offerings brought at the end of the barley harvest in Pesaḥ and the wheat harvest on Shavuot) must be brought from grain grown in Israel from the recent harvest.

We explore the way the oems and Shavuot is connected to Sinai as well as the notion of Ḥovot ha-Tzibbur (Communal Obligations) as Resources for Imagining Jewish Community.

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Menachot 82: פֶּסַח כּוּלֵּיהּ חֲדָא מִילְּתָא הִיא

jyungar April 3, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 82

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We learned only voluntary sacrifices whose meat is eaten by the owner of the offering can be purchased with money from redeemed ma’aser sheni. Such money cannot be used to purchase obligatory sacrifices – even those whose meat is eaten by the owner – since obligatory sacrifices can only come from ordinary money and not from sanctified money.

The Mishna on our daf searches for a source for this law. The passage that is suggested says that the korban Pesaḥ must be brought from tzon u’bakar – “the flock and the herd”, i.e. cattle (see Devarim 16:2). We know, however, that only certain types of cattle can be used for the korban Pesaḥ – specifically a lamb or a goat (see Shemot 12:5).

The Mishna concludes that the purpose of using a broader term – “cattle” – is to connect other sacrifices to the korban Pesaḥ so that we can conclude that just as the korban Pesaḥ is brought from personal funds and not sanctified money (since at the time when the first korban Pesaḥ was brought the laws of sanctified money did not yet exist), similarly, all other obligatory sacrifices must come from personal funds and not from sanctified money.We learned only voluntary sacrifices whose meat is eaten by the owner of the offering can be purchased with money from redeemed ma’aser sheni. Such money cannot be used to purchase obligatory sacrifices – even those whose meat is eaten by the owner – since obligatory sacrifices can only come from ordinary money and not from sanctified money.

The Mishna on our daf searches for a source for this law. The passage that is suggested says that the korban Pesaḥ must be brought from tzon u’bakar – “the flock and the herd”, i.e. cattle (see Devarim 16:2). We know, however, that only certain types of cattle can be used for the korban Pesaḥ – specifically a lamb or a goat (see Shemot 12:5).

The Mishna concludes that the purpose of using a broader term – “cattle” – is to connect other sacrifices to the korban Pesaḥ so that we can conclude that just as the korban Pesaḥ is brought from personal funds and not sanctified money (since at the time when the first korban Pesaḥ was brought the laws of sanctified money did not yet exist), similarly, all other obligatory sacrifices must come from personal funds and not from sanctified money.We learned only voluntary sacrifices whose meat is eaten by the owner of the offering can be purchased with money from redeemed ma’aser sheni. Such money cannot be used to purchase obligatory sacrifices – even those whose meat is eaten by the owner – since obligatory sacrifices can only come from ordinary money and not from sanctified money.

The Mishna on our daf searches for a source for this law. The passage that is suggested says that the korban Pesaḥ must be brought from tzon u’bakar – “the flock and the herd”, i.e. cattle (see Devarim 16:2). We know, however, that only certain types of cattle can be used for the korban Pesaḥ – specifically a lamb or a goat (see Shemot 12:5).

The Mishna concludes that the purpose of using a broader term – “cattle” – is to connect other sacrifices to the korban Pesaḥ so that we can conclude that just as the korban Pesaḥ is brought from personal funds and not sanctified money (since at the time when the first korban Pesaḥ was brought the laws of sanctified money did not yet exist), similarly, all other obligatory sacrifices must come from personal funds and not from sanctified money.

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Menachot 81: כּוֹפִין אוֹתוֹ, וּמֵבִיא תּוֹדָה וְלַחְמָהּ

jyungar April 2, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 81

To download, click/tap here: PDF

The new Mishna establishes several rules governing how a person who vows to bring a thanks offering may designate the source of the funding—whether from non-sacred money (chulin) or second-tithe money (ma'aser sheni). The fundamental principle is that a sincere vow (neder) creates a personal obligation, and obligations may not be fulfilled using second-tithe money, which carries its own consecrated status and is designated for consumption in Jerusalem rather than for the satisfaction of independently incurred debts to the Temple.

We explore the controversy between Beit Shammai and Beit Hillel concerning the retraction or dissolution of vows (nedarim), with particular focus on the dispute recorded in our daf regarding one who vows to bring a thanks offering without its obligatory loaves, or an animal sacrifice without its libations.

The Shammaite principle—that when a declaration contains internally contradictory elements, one attends exclusively to the first utterance—is examined through multiple passages in the Talmudic corpus including Tractate Nazir, Tractate Nedarim, and the legal discussion preserved in the Gemara on our daf.

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Menachot 80: חָמֵשׁ חַטָּאוֹת מֵתוֹת

jyungar April 1, 2026

For the source text click/tap here: Menachot 80

To download, click/tap here: PDF

If one separated an animal to be used as a purification offering, but then lost it, and he brought another animal in its place, and then found the first one, it should die. If one separates coins to be used [to purchase] a purification offering, then lost them, and bought an offering with [other coins], and then found the [original] coins, they should be brought [i.e., thrown into] the Salt Sea.

Tractate Temurah deals with substitutions—what happens when one animal is brought to the Temple in place of another as a sacrifice? The first animal has already been designated for sacred service and cannot simply be used for normal needs. Yet if the sacrifice was a chatat (purification offering), and the owner has already been purified, what should be done with the first animal? This mishnah says that no benefit can come from an animal or coins once they are designated for God.

We explore these areas like the salt sea and how they function in Halacha and as a conceptual repository for sacred objects that have become legally irresolvable.

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Julian Ungar-Sargon

This is Julian Ungar-Sargon's personal website. It contains poems, essays, and podcasts for the spiritual seeker and interdisciplinary aficionado.​