“[My offering, My food…], you shall observe to present to Me at its appointed time” (Numbers 28:2) – this is what the verse said: “The righteous eats to his own satisfaction” (Proverbs 13:25). This is Eliezer, who said to Rebecca: “Please let me sip a little water from your jug” (Genesis 24:17) – a sip. “And the belly of the wicked will lack” (Proverbs 13:25) – this is Esau, who said to Jacob: “Please pour for me [haliteni]” (Genesis 25:30).

Rabbi Yitzḥak bar Rabbi Ze’eira said: He opened his mouth wide like a camel. He said: ‘I will open my mouth, and you will insert it.’ There we learned: “One may not forcibly overfeed a camel, and one may not force feed it; however, one may place food into its mouth [malitin].30 Shabbat 155b. “The righteous eats to his own satisfaction” (Proverbs 13:25) – this is Ruth the Moavite, in whose regard it is written: “She ate, was satiated, and left over” (Ruth 2:14) – there was blessing in the mouth of that righteous woman.31Although she ate little, she was satiated.

“And the belly of the wicked will lack” (Proverbs 13:25) – these are the nations of the world. There was an incident involving an idolater who invited all the residents of his city. Rabbi Dostai said: He invited me to that feast with all the residents of his city, and of all the delicacies in the world only brittle nuts were lacking. What did he do?

He took from before us the board of the table, which was worth six silver talents, and he broke it.32He broke the board because he was angry that the brittle nuts were lacking. I said to him: ‘Why did you do that?’ He said to me: ‘You say that this world is ours and the World to Come is yours. If we do not eat now, when will we eat?’ I read in his regard: “And the belly of the wicked will lack.”