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Vayikra Rabbah Reader

Read Vayikra Rabbah in source order, passage by passage, with the close English translation where available and the original source text for checking.

Page 4 of 9 · passages 121-160Vayikra Rabbah 1:1 – Vayikra Rabbah 37:4Work Overview →

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121

Source Text

How is the examination of leprosy undertaken?19The verse states that the priest examines the afflicted individual in “the entire view of the eyes of the priest” (Leviticus 13:12). It is understood from this verse that the priest looks only at parts of the body that are visible when the individual is unclothed, but in a normal pose. The man is examined [as he stands], like one who is hoeing20With his legs spread. or like one who is harvesting olives;21With his hands upraised. like one hoeing for the concealed area and like one harvesting olives, for the armpits.

The woman, like one weaving, or like one nursing her child under the breast; like one weaving wool, for the right armpit. Rabbi Yehuda says: Like one spinning flax for the left arm. Just as it is examined for leprosy, so it is examined for shaving.22The leper must have all the hair on his body on the seventh day of his purification process. It is taught: A person may examine any leprosy other than his own leprosy; Rabbi Meir says: Not even the leprosy of his relatives.23Mishna Nega’im 2:5.

Who examined Miriam’s leprosy? If you say Moses examined it, a non-priest does not examine leprosy. If you say Aaron examined it, a relative does not examine leprosy. The Holy One blessed be He said: ‘I am the priest, I quarantine her, I deem her ritually pure.’

That is what is written: “The people did not travel until Miriam was readmitted” (Numbers 12:15). If so, the people were with the Divine Presence and the Divine Presence was waiting for her. Rabbi Levi said in the name of Rabbi Ḥama ben Rabbi Ḥanina: Moses was greatly troubled by this matter: ‘Is this commensurate with the honor due my brother Aaron, for him to be examining leprosy?’ The Holy One blessed be He said to him: ‘Does he not benefit from it twenty-four priestly gifts?’

The parable says: One who eats hearts of palm will be wounded by the tree trunk.24It will scratch him as he works to obtain the heart of palm.

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“A spot [se’et]” – this is Babylon, based on: “You will recite [venasata] this parable about the king of Babylon: How has the oppressor ceased, the arrogance been ended” (Isaiah 14:4). Rabbi Abba bar Kahana said: “The arrogance been ended [shaveta madheva]” – this is the kingdom that says: Measure and bring [medod vehaveh].25Bring all the gold to the king. Rabbi Shmuel bar Naḥman said: The kingdom that turns the face of a person pale [madhevet] when he approaches it.

The Rabbis say: It is on the basis of the golden head, “you are the golden head [di dahava]” (Daniel 2:38).26This is stated in reference to Nebuchadnezzar. All the Sages cited here agree that the reference is to Babylon. “A scab [sapaḥat]” – this is Media, that produced the wicked Haman, who would strikes like a serpent, based on: “On your belly you shall go” (Genesis 3:14).27Possibly this is based on the similarity of the word sapaḥat with saḥaf, drag, as a snake drags along the ground.

“A bright spot [baheret]” – this is Greece, which would clearly state [mavheret] its edicts against Israel and say to them: Write on the horn of the ox that you have no portion in the God of Israel. “A mark of leprosy [nega tzaraat]” – this is Edom, which rose [to prominence]on the authority of the elder. “And it will become a mark of leprosy [nega tzaraat] on the skin of his flesh.”28This is the harshest of them all because it is initiated by a close relative, “his flesh.”

Although in this world, the priest examines leprosy, in the future, the Holy One blessed be He has said: ‘I will purify you.’ That is what is written: “I will sprinkle pure water on you and you will be purified” (Ezekiel 36:25).

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“This shall be the law of the leper on the day of his purification: He shall be brought to the priest” (Leviticus 14:2). “This shall be the law of the leper.” That is what is written: “They are six that the Lord hates, and seven that are an abomination to His soul” (Proverbs 6:16). Rabbi Meir and the Rabbis, Rabbi Meir says: Six and seven are thirteen.1Six are enumerated before this verse and seven after this verse.

The Rabbis say: There are a total of seven; “and seven” that is written is [referring to] the seventh, who is worse than all of them together. Which is this? It is “one who incites discord among brothers” (Proverbs 6:19). These are they: “Haughty eyes, a lying tongue, hands that shed innocent blood, a heart devising iniquitous thoughts, feet hastening to run to evil, he who utters lies as a false witness, and he who incites discord among brothers (Proverbs 6:17–19).

Rabbi Yoḥanan said: All of them are afflicted with leprosy. “Haughty eyes,” from the daughters of Zion,2The precedent of the daughters of Zion demonstrates that one with haughty eyes is afflicted with leprosy. as it is written: “Because the daughters of Zion are haughty and they walk with outstretched necks and painted eyes” (Isaiah 3:16), and it is written: “The Lord will afflict the head of the daughters of Zion with scabs” (Isaiah 3:17).

They would extend themselves, erect like spears, and walk haughtily. “They walk with outstretched necks,” one of them would wear her jewelry and would turn her neck in order to flaunt her jewelry. “And painted eyes,” Rabbi Manei of Caesarea said: They would paint their eyes with red paint. Reish Lakish said: With red eye balm.

“They walk with dainty steps” (Isaiah 3:16). When one of them was tall she would bring two short ones, one on one side and one on the other side, so she would appear tall. When one of them was short, she would bring two short ones and would place a thick sole on her feet so she would appear tall. “And strut [te’akasna] their feet” – Rabbi Abba bar Kahana said: There was the form of a serpent3One term for a serpent is akas.

The serpent was a symbol of idolatry. on her shoes. The Rabbis say: She would bring an eggshell and fill it with balsam and place it under the heel of her shoe. When she would see a group of young men, she would stomp on it and the scent would spread through them like the venom of a serpent. The Holy One blessed be He would say to Isaiah: ‘What are these doing here?

Let them rise and be exiled from here.’ Isaiah would say to them: ‘Repent before enemies set upon you!’ They would say: ‘If enemies set upon us, what will they be able to do,’ as it is stated: “[Woe to them…] who say: Let Him hurry, let Him hasten His action, so that we will see it” (Isaiah 5:18–19). ‘A commander will see me and abduct me. A governor will see me and abduct me.

A general will see me and abduct me, and seat me in his carriage.’4The women said that they would not mind being taken captive by enemy officers. That is, “let the counsel of the Holy One of Israel approach and be realized, and we will know it” (Isaiah 5:19); we will know whose counsel prevails, ours or His. When their sins became greater, the enemies came, and [the women] would adorn themselves and go out before them like prostitutes.

A commander would see them and abduct them. A governor would see them and abduct them. A general would see them and abduct them and seat them in the carriage. The Holy One blessed be He said: ‘Will My counsel not prevail and theirs will prevail?’

What did he do? “The Lord afflicted the head of the daughters of Zion with scabs [vesipaḥ].” Rabbi Elazar and Rabbi Yosei bar Ḥanina, Rabbi Elazar says: He afflicted them with leprosy, as it is written: “And for the spot and for the scab [velasapaḥat]” (Leviticus 14:56). Rabbi Yosei ben Rabbi Ḥanina said: He brought up on their head swarms [mishpaḥot] upon swarms of lice.

Rabbi Ḥiyya bar Abba said: He rendered them mekhudanot maidservants [shefaḥot]. What is mekhudanot? It is enslaved maidservants. Rabbi Ḥiyya and Rabbi Ḥilfa bar Idi said in the name of Rabbi Yosei: What is vesipaḥ?

He protected their families so that the holy seed would not intermingle with the peoples of the lands. The Holy One blessed be He said: ‘I know that the nations of the world do not separate themselves from leprosy.’ What did He do? “The Lord will bare their private parts” (Isaiah 3:17).

The Holy One blessed be He indicated to their uteruses, and [the woman] would discharge blood and fill the carriage with blood. The government official would pierce her with a spear and place her before the carriage. The carriage would go over them and trample them. That is what Jeremiah says: “Turn away [suru] impure one, [turn away, turn away [suru suru]], they shouted at them” (Lamentations 4:15).

Rabbi Meir said: It is in the Greek language, stench [siron siron].5Because of her foul odor, the official cast her from the carriage. “A lying tongue” (Proverbs 6:17) from Miriam, as it is written: “Miriam and Aaron spoke against Moses” (Numbers 12:1). From where is it derived that she was afflicted with leprosy? As it is stated: “The cloud withdrew from upon the Tent, and behold, Miriam was leprous like snow” (Numbers 12:10).

“Hands that shed innocent blood” (Proverbs 6:17), from Yoav, as it is stated: “The Lord will repay his blood upon his head” (I Kings 2:32). From where is it derived that he was afflicted with leprosy? As it is written: “It shall rest on the head of Yoav…those who suffer from discharge and lepers” (II Samuel 3:29). “A heart devising iniquitous thoughts” (Proverbs 6:18), from Uzziah, who sought to usurp the high priesthood.

From where is it derived that he was afflicted with leprosy? As it is stated: “The Lord afflicted the king, and he was a leper until the day of his death” (II Kings 15:5). “Feet hastening to run to evil” (Proverbs 6:18), from Geḥazi, as it is stated: “Geḥazi, the lad of Elisha…said…[I will run after him and take something from him]” (II Kings 5:20). From where is it derived that he was afflicted with leprosy?

As it is stated: “The leprosy of Naaman shall cleave to you” (II Kings 5:27). “And he who incites discord among brothers” (Proverbs 6:19), from Pharaoh, who incited discord between Abraham and Sarah. From where is it derived that he was afflicted with leprosy? As it is stated: “The Lord afflicted [vaynaga] Pharaoh”6The word nega means leprosy, as in Leviticus 13:2. (Genesis 12:17).

Rabban Shimon ben Gamliel said: One time I was walking on the road between Tiberias and Tzippori. A certain elder encountered me and said to me: ‘There are twenty-four types of skin disease and none is more problematic for the conduct of sexual relations than raatan.’7A form of gonorrhea. Rabbi Pedat said: Pharaoh was afflicted with it. That is why Moses cautioned Israel: “This shall be the law of the leper [hametzora],” the defamer [hamotzi shem ra].8The Torah refers to the law of the leper [metzora] rather than the law of leprosy in order to hint to the fact that one who defames others [motzi shem ra] becomes a leper.

The fact that this is the only cause alluded to in the verse affirms the statement that “he who incites discord among brothers” is worse than the others who are punished with leprosy. It is taught: Rabbi Yosei said: A certain elder from the men of Jerusalem said to me: ‘There are twenty-four types of skin disease and all of them are problematic for the conduct of sexual relations, but raatan is most problematic of them all.’

From what does one contract it? We learned: If one let his blood, and engaged in sexual relations, he will have epileptic children, etc.9This is a reference to a statement cited in the Talmud. The statement continues: If both of them let their blood and then engaged in sexual relations, they will have children with raatan (Ketuvot 77b; Nidda 17a). Rabbi Yoḥanan said: Be wary of flies that frequent sufferers of raatan.

Rabbi Zeira would not sit in their midst. Rabbi Elazar would not enter their tents. Rabbi Ami and Rabbi Asi would not eat an egg of theirs. In that regard it is stated: “This shall be [the law of the leper [nametzora]].

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Another matter, “this shall be the law of the leper.” That is what is written: “Who is the man who desires life?” (Psalms 34:13). There was an incident involving a certain peddler who would circulate in the towns adjacent to Tzippori and would proclaim and say: ‘Who seeks to purchase the elixir of life?’ [People] would crowd around him. Rabbi Yanai was sitting and interpreting verses in his study.

He heard [the peddler] proclaiming: ‘Who seeks the elixir of life?’ He said to him: ‘Come in here and sell it to me.’ He said to him: ‘You and those like you do not require it.’ [Rabbi Yanai] pressed him and he came to him. [The peddler] took out the book of Psalms and showed him the verse: “Who is the man who desires life?” What is written after it?

“Guard your tongue from evil…Turn away from evil and perform good” (Psalms 34:14–15). Rabbi Yanai said: ‘Solomon, too, proclaims and says: “One who guards his mouth and his tongue guards himself from troubles”’ (Proverbs 21:23). Rabbi Yanai said: ‘All my life I have been reading this verse, but I did not know how obvious it is10That guarding the tongue is the elixir of life. until this peddler came and informed [me]: “Who is the man who desires life.”’

Therefore, Moses cautions Israel and says: “This shall be the law of the leper [hametzora],” the law of the defamer [hamotzi shem ra].

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Another matter, “this shall be the law of the leper.” That is what is written: “Though his height [sio] ascends to the heavens, and his head reaches to the clouds [laav]” (Job 20:6); sio, to the heights, laav, to the clouds.11The midrash has defined the words sio and laav employed in the verse. “He will perish forever like his dung” (Job 20:7); just as dung is foul, so, too, he is foul. “They who see him will say: Where is he?” (Job 20:7).

They see him but they do not recognize him, as it is written regarding Job’s comrades: “They lifted their eyes from a distance but they did not recognize him” (Job 2:12). Rabbi Yoḥanan and Rabbi Shimon ben Lakish, Rabbi Yoḥanan says: It is prohibited to walk within four cubits to the east of a leper. Rabbi Shimon said: Even one hundred cubits. But they do not disagree.

The one who said four cubits, that is when the wind is not blowing. The one who said one hundred cubits, that is when the wind is blowing. Rabbi Meir would not eat eggs from the alleyway of a leper. Rabbi Ami and Rabbi Asi would not enter the alleyways of the leper.

Reish Lakish, when he would see one of them in the city, he would stone them with stones. He would say to him: ‘Go out to your place. Do not contaminate the people,’ as Rabbi Ḥiyya taught: “He shall dwell apart” (Leviticus 13:46); he shall dwell alone. Rabbi Elazar ben Rabbi Shimon, when he would see one of them, he would hide from him. [All this is] as it is written: “This shall be the law of the leper [hametzora],” of the defamer [hamotzi shem ra].

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Another matter, “this shall be the law of the leper.” That is what is written: “But to the wicked one, God says: Who are you to speak of My statutes or to invoke My covenant?” (Psalms 50:16). Ben Azai was sitting and expounding and fire was blazing around him. They said to him: ‘Are you, perhaps, engaging in the protocols of the Chariot?’12The Divine Chariot is understood to have been described by Ezekiel in a very deep and esoteric prophetic vision (Ezekiel chapter 1).

He said to them: ‘No. I am, rather, connecting words of Torah to the Prophets, and Prophets to Writings, and the words of Torah are as joyous as the day they were given at Sinai. The essential giving of the Torah was in fire; that is what is written: “The mountain was burning with fire”’ (Deuteronomy 4:11). Rabbi Levi said: We found in the Torah, in the Prophets, and in the Writings that the Holy One blessed be He does not desire the praise of a wicked person.

From the Torah: “He shall cover his upper lip, and shall cry: Impure, impure” (Leviticus 13:45).13But he shall not call out matters of sanctity and praise of God. From the Prophets: “It was as he was telling the king that he had revived the dead…this is the woman, and this is her son whom Elisha revived” (II Kings 8:5).14The Holy One blessed be He arranged that the woman would recount the miracle before the king and not Geḥazi the leper.

Perhaps she was standing just behind the gate?15Perhaps she just happened to be there, and since the story was about her, she was the one to relate its details. The Rabbis say: Even had she been at the ends of the earth, the Holy One blessed be He would have diverted her and brought her so that this wicked one would not speak in praise of the Holy One blessed be He. From the Writings: “But to the wicked one God says: Who are you to speak of My statutes?” (Psalms 50:16).

Rabbi Elazar said in the name of Rabbi Yosei ben Zimra: There are two hundred and forty-eight limbs in a person, some of them are recumbent and some of them are erect. The tongue is situated between two cheeks. An aqueduct16Saliva. passes beneath it and it is folded into several folds.17It contracts in order to fit into the mouth. Come and see how many fires it ignites; if it stood erect, all the more so.

Therefore, Moses cautions Israel and says: “This shall be the law of the leper [hametzora],” of the defamer [hamotzi shem ra].

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Another matter, “this shall be the law of the leper.” That is what is written: “Do not allow your mouth to cause your flesh to sin” (Ecclesiastes 5:5). Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi interpreted the verse regarding those who pledge charity publicly but do not give. Rabbi Ḥanina bar Pappa said: It is referring to those who speak slander.

Rabbi Binyamin ben Levi interpreted the verse regarding those who are pretenders in their devotion to Torah study. Rabbi Manei interpreted the verse regarding vows…, as it appears in the midrash of Kohelet.18Kohelet Rabba 5:5. The Rabbis interpreted the verse regarding Miriam.19This is referring to the incident in which Miriam and Aaron spoke against Moses; see Numbers chapter 12. Based on the verse’s usage of the feminine form of the word “spoke [vatedaber]” (Numbers 12:1), it is understood that it was Miriam who did the speaking.

“Do not allow your mouth to cause your flesh to sin,” do not allow one of your limbs to cause all your limbs to sin. “Do not say before the messenger” (Ecclesiastes 5:5), this is Moses; that is what is written: “He sent a messenger and took us out of Egypt” (Numbers 20:16). “It is unwitting” (Ecclesiastes 5:5), “as we have been foolish and we have sinned” (Numbers 12:11). “Why should God become angry at your voice?” (Ecclesiastes 5:5).

At that voice, as it is stated: “The wrath of the Lord was enflamed against them and He departed” (Numbers 12:9). “And destroy your handiwork” (Ecclesiastes 5:5), Rabbi Yoḥanan said: She sinned with her mouth but all her limbs were afflicted. That is what is written: “The cloud withdrew from upon the Tent, [and behold, Miriam was leprous like snow]” (Numbers 12:10). Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi taught: A word is worth a sela, but silence is worth two [sela], as we learned: Shimon his son said: All my days I grew among the Sages, but I found nothing for the body better than silence.20Mishna Avot 1:17.

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Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi said: “Torah” is written five times regarding a leper. “This is the law [torat] of the mark of leprosy” (Leviticus 13:59). “This shall be the law [torat] of the leper” (Leviticus 14:2). “This is the law [torat] of one in whom there is a mark of leprosy” (Leviticus 14:32). “This is the law [tora] for any leprous mark” (Leviticus 14:54). “This is the law [torat] of leprosy” (Leviticus 14:57). “This shall be the law [torat] of the leper [hametzora],” of the defamer [hamotzi shem ra], to teach you that anyone who speaks slander violates the five books of the Torah. That is why Moses cautions: “This shall be the law of the leper.”

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“The priest shall command, and one shall take for the one being purified two living pure birds, and cedar wood, and scarlet wool, and hyssop” (Leviticus 14:4). “The priest shall command, and one shall take for the one being purified [two living pure birds].” Rabbi Yehuda bar Simon said: These birds are noisy. The Holy One blessed be He said: ‘Let the voice come and atone for the voice.’

Rabbi Shimon ben Levi said: A free bird that eats of his food and drinks his water.21It should be a free bird that lives where it wants and is not confined, and the only benefit it gets from man is food and drink. Is the matter not an a fortiori inference? If birds that eat of his food and drink his water atone for him, a priest who benefits from Israel [by receiving] the twenty-four priestly gifts, all the more so.

The parable says: One who eats hearts of palm will be wounded by the tree trunk.22There is no reward without paying the price. Since the priest benefits from Israel, it is his job to atone for them.

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Rabbi Aḥa said: It is dependent upon a person to ensure that illnesses do not befall him. What is the source? It is as Rav Aḥa said: “The Lord will remove all illness [ḥoli] from you” (Deuteronomy 7:15); it is “from you” to ensure that illnesses do not befall you. Rabbi Avin said: This is the evil inclination, whose beginning is sweet23In Aramaic, the term ḥoli means sweet, and it is an allusion to the evil inclination. but whose end is bitter.

Rabbi Tanḥuma in the name of Rabbi Elazar, and Rabbi Menaḥama in the name of Rav said: “The Lord will remove all illness from you,” this is the [evil] eye, in accordance with the opinion of Rabbi Elazar, [who said]: Ninety-nine [die] due to the [evil] eye and one at the hand of Heaven.24Only one in a hundred people die due to natural causes. Some commentaries emend the text to match the opinion of Rabbi Elazar as cited in Bava Metzia (107b), where the “illness” is interpreted as referring to the medical problems stemming from the gall bladder, which was viewed as the source of a wide variety of illnesses (see, e.g., Etz Yosef).

Rav and Rabbi Ḥanina, Rav [interpreted] in accordance with his opinion, as he said: Ninety-nine [die] due to the [evil] eye and one at the hand of Heaven. Rabbi Ḥanina [interpreted] in accordance with his opinion, as Rabbi Ḥanina and Rabbi Natan both said: Ninety-nine [die] due to cold and one at the hand of Heaven. Rav, because he resided in Babylon where the evil eye is prevalent; Rabbi Ḥanina, because he resided in Tzippori, and it was cold there.

Antoninus said to our saintly Rabbi:25Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi. ‘Pray on my behalf.’ He said to him: ‘May you be spared from cold.’ He said to him: ‘Add one garment and the cold is gone.’ He said to him: ‘May you be spared from the heat.’

He said to him: ‘Say that prayer on my behalf,’ as it is written: “None escapes its heat” (Psalms 19:7). Rabbi Yishmael ben Rabbi Naḥman said in the name of Rabbi Natan: Ninety-nine [die] due to heat and one at the hand of Heaven. The Rabbis say: Ninety-nine die [due] to negligence and one at the hand of Heaven.

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“The priest shall command and one shall slaughter the one bird in an earthenware vessel over springwater” (Leviticus 14:5). “The priest shall command and one shall slaughter the one bird.” Why does he slaughter one and leave one? It is to say to you: Just as it is impossible for the slaughtered one to return, so it is impossible for the leprosy to return.26Just as the slaughtered bird will not come back to life, so the leprosy will not return to the individual once he has repented, if he does not return to his sinful ways.

At that moment, the Holy One blessed be He summons His legions and says: ‘It was not for nothing that I struck him, but rather, “I became angry because of his sinful thievery; I struck him…[and he went waywardly in the way of his heart]”’ (Isaiah 57:17). Rabbi Abba bar Kahan said: The vomiter had returned to his vomit, just as it says: “Like a dog that returns to its vomit” (Proverbs 26:11).27God did not strike him for nothing, but rather because “he went waywardly in the way of his heart.”

Rabbi Abba compares this to one who returns to his vomit because before this individual was afflicted with leprosy he had received divine warnings in the form of leprous marks on his house and clothing, and yet he repeated his sin (Etz Yosef). Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi said: The fool returns to his path of folly, just as it says: “So a fool repeats his folly” (Proverbs 26:11). “I saw his ways and I will heal him; I will guide him and pay condolences to him and his mourners” (Isaiah 57:18); these are his limbs that mourn him.

“Creator of the expression [niv] of the lips” (Isaiah 57:19), Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi said: If a person’s lips produced [henivu] prayer, he is guaranteed that his prayer is heard. What is the source? “Creator of the expression of the lips: Peace, peace [for the distant and for the near said the Lord, and I will heal him]” (Isaiah 57:19). Rabbi Yehoshua bar Naḥmani says: If one focused [kiven] his heart in prayer, he is guaranteed that his prayer will be heard, as it is stated: “Prepare [takhin] their heart, incline your ear” (Psalms 10:17).

When the punishment has been completed, he is absolved.28This is based on the double usage of the word “peace [shalom]” in the verse cited above (Isaiah 57:19). The midrash interprets this to mean that when his punishment has been completed [shelimin] he will live in peace. “For the distant” (Isaiah 57:19), Rav Huna and Rav Yudan in the name of Rav Aḥa: This is the leper, who had been distant but has drawn near.

“Said the Lord and I will heal him” (Isaiah 57:19), He will heal him Himself, as it is stated: “Heal me, Lord, and I will be healed; save me, and I will be saved…” (Jeremiah 17:14).

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“When you will come to the land of Canaan, which I am giving to you as a possession, and I will place a mark of leprosy on a house in the land of your possession” (Leviticus 14:34). “When you will come to the land of Canaan…and I will place a mark of leprosy on a house in the land of your possession.” That is what is written: “Indeed, God is good to Israel, to those pure of heart” (Psalms 73:1). One might [think God is good] to all; the verse states: “For those pure of heart,” those whose hearts are pure in the performance of mitzvot.

“Happy is the person whose strength is in You” (Psalms 84:7). One might [think this applies] to all; the verse states: “Paths in their heart” (Psalms 84:7) – it is for those for whom the paths of Torah are paved in their heart. “Be good, Lord, to those who are good” (Psalms 125:4). One might [think it applies] to all; the verse states: “To the upright of heart” (Psalms 125:4).

“The Lord is good; He is a stronghold on the day of trouble” (Nahum 1:7). One might [think it applies] to all; the verse states: “and He knows who takes refuge in Him” (Nahum 1:7). “The Lord is good to those who hope for Him” (Lamentations 3:25). One might [think it applies] to all; the verse states: “To the soul that seeks Him” (Lamentations 3:25).

“The Lord is close to all who call Him” (Psalms 145:18). One might [think it applies] to all; the verse states: “To all who call Him in truth” (Psalms 145:18). “[A psalm of Asaf…] But I, my feet came close to veering” (Psalms 73:1–2). Rav and Levi, one said it was Asaf son of Koraḥ, and one said it was a different Asaf. The one who said it was Asaf son of Koraḥ [interprets the verse to mean]: I would have already been dwelling with my father in Gehenna.

The one who said it was a different Asaf: I would have already been dwelling with the wicked in Gehenna. Why? “For I was jealous of the revelers [baholelim]” (Psalms 73:3). In the West,1The Land of Israel. they say: Those whose hearts are filled with wicked thoughts [holelot].

Rabbi Levi would call them: Arrogant cynics, who bring woe [alelai] to the world. “I saw the peace of the wicked” (Psalms 73:3). It is written: “There is no peace for the wicked” (Isaiah 57:21), and you say: “Peace of [shelom] the wicked”? Rather, I saw the retribution [shilumim] of the wicked.

“For there are no chains toward their death; indeed, they are healthy” (Psalms 73:4). I did not cause them to contemplate with illnesses,2I did not bring upon them difficult illnesses that might cause them to contemplate the cause of their suffering. Some commentaries cite alternate versions of the text (see Rabbi David Luria; Etz Yosef). and I did not bind them in chains. But rather, “they are healthy [bari ulam]” – I rendered them as healthy [beriim] as the Hall [ulam], as we learned: The entrance to the Hall was forty cubits high and twenty cubits wide and there were five oak cornices above it.3Mishna Midot 3:7.

These oak cornices were very sturdy and demonstrated the architectural strength of the Hall. The reference here is to the Hall in the Temple, which was situated between the Courtyard and the Sancturay. Rabbi Dostai ben Rabbi Yanai in the name of Rabbi Meir and the Rabbis, Rabbi Dostai said in the name of Rabbi Meir: This woman spins one maa of coarse thread and one maa of fine thread. These thin ones are for threads and those are for cords.4This is in explanation of the phrase “For there are no chains toward their death, indeed, they are healthy.”

Rabbi Dostai explains that although when a woman spins thread some threads come out thick and some thin, in the case of the wicked, they may go through life with no hardship at all. The Rabbis say: They have no string of punishments from which they will die, but rather, they are healthy until judgment day. That is what is written: “He made the Hall of [veulam] the throne where he would judge, the Hall of [ulam] judgment” (I Kings 7:7).

“They are excluded from human toil” (Psalms 73:5). Not to plow, not to sow, and not to reap. “No plagues of man afflict them” (Psalms 73:5), Rav Hamnuna said: Not even the plagues that afflict those in whose regard it is written: “You, My flock, flock of My pasture, you are men” (Ezekiel 34:31). Therefore, Moses cautions Israel: “When you will come to the land of Canaan.”5Although the evildoers of the nations of the world do not suffer in this world and are punished in the World to Come, Moses warns Israel that they will suffer for their sins in this world in order that they may be rewarded in the World to Come.

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That is what is written: “The increase of his house will be exiled, poured out [nigarot] on the day of His wrath” (Job 20:28). They will be dragging [gorerin] it and taking it out. When? It is on the day that the Holy One blessed be He will arouse [sheyigareh] his wrath against that man.

How so? If a man says to another: ‘Lend me a kav of wheat,’ and he says: ‘I do not have.’ [He asks to borrow] a kav of barley, [and the man responds:] ‘I do not have.’ [He asks to borrow] a kav of dates, [and the man responds:] ‘I do not have.’ If a woman says to another: ‘Lend me a sifter,’ and she says: ‘I do not have.’ ‘Lend me a sieve,’ and she says: ‘I do not have.’ What does the Holy One blessed be He do?

He brings leprosy upon the house. When he takes all of his utensils out,6See Leviticus 14:36; when a house is struck by leprosy it must be cleared completely before the priest enters. the people see and say: ‘Would he not say that he has nothing? See how much wheat there is here, how much barley, how many dates there are here. The house has been deservedly cursed with these curses.’

Rabbi Yitzḥak ben Elazar cites it from this verse: “recessed [shekaarurot]” (Leviticus 14:37); the house has sunk [shaka] with these curses. Therefore, Moses cautions Israel: “When you will come to the land of Canaan.”

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For ten matters leprosy comes: For idol worship, for forbidden sexual relations, for bloodshed, for desecration of the Name, for blaspheming of the Name, for one who robs the public, for one who steals what is not his, for the haughty, for slander, and for miserliness. For idol worship – [this is derived] from [the precedent of] Israel, who bore false witness against the Holy One blessed be He and said regarding the calf: “This is your god, Israel” (Exodus 32:4).

From where is it derived that they were afflicted with leprosy? As it is stated: “Moses saw the people, that it was exposed [farua]” (Exodus 32:25); that there was an outbreak of leprosy in their midst.7Regarding the leper it is written: “The hair of his head shall go loose [farua]” (Leviticus 13:45). For forbidden sexual relations, from the daughters of Israel, as it is stated: “Because the daughters of Zion are haughty [and they walk with outstretched necks and painted eyes, they walk with dainty steps and strut their feet]” (Isaiah 3:16).8They would attempt to attract attention in order to engage in forbidden sexual relations.

From where is it derived that they were afflicted with leprosy? It is as it is stated: “The Lord will afflict the head of the daughters of Zion with scabs” (Isaiah 3:17). For bloodshed, from Yoav, as it is stated: “It shall rest on the head of Yoav…[may there not be eliminated from the house of Yoav those who suffer from discharge and lepers]” (II Samuel 3:29).9Yoav, King David’s general, was punished for having engaged in unnecessary bloodshed.

See, e.g., I Kings 2:32. For desecration of the Name, from Geḥazi. “Geḥazi, the lad of…the man of God, said: [I will run after him and take something [me’uma] from him]” (II Kings 5:20). What is me’uma?

It is from the blemish [min muma] that is in him. From where is it derived that he was afflicted with leprosy? As it is stated: “The leprosy of Naaman shall cleave to you” (II Kings 5:27). For blaspheming of the name, from Goliath, as it is stated: “The Philistine cursed David by his gods” (I Samuel 17:43).

From where is it derived that he was afflicted with leprosy? As it is stated: “This day, the Lord will deliver you [yasgirekha] into my hand” (I Samuel 17:46), and the word for delivery stated here is nothing other than an expression of leprosy, as it is stated: “The priest shall quarantine him [vehisgiro]” (Leviticus 13:21). For one who robs the public, from Shevna, who would derive benefit from consecrated property.

From where is it derived that he was afflicted with leprosy? As it is stated: “Behold, the Lord will rattle you a great rattling and He will wrap you up [veotekha ato]” (Isaiah 22:17). Veotekha ato is nothing other than leprosy, as it is stated: “And he shall cover [yateh] his upper lip” (Leviticus 13:45). For one who steals what is not his, from Uziyahu,10He sought to usurp the high priesthood.

See II Chronicles 26:16; Vayikra Rabba 16:1. as it is written: “King Uzziah was a leper until the day of his death” (II Chronicles 26:21). For haughtiness, as it is written: “But with his strengthening, his heart grew arrogant, until it became corrupt, and he trespassed against the Lord his God” (II Chronicles 26:16). For slander, from Miriam, as it is written: “Miriam and Aaron spoke against Moses” (Numbers 12:1).

From where is it derived that she was afflicted with leprosy? As it is stated: “The cloud withdrew from upon the Tent, [and behold, Miriam was leprous like snow]” (Numbers 12:10). For miserliness, as it is stated: “The one to whom the house belongs [asher lo habayit] shall come” (Leviticus 14:35), one who designated his house for himself [lo] and does not wish to benefit others. Like what Rabbi Elazar said: “recessed [shekaarurot]” (Leviticus 14:37), the house has sunk [shaka] with these curses. Therefore, Moses cautions Israel: “When you will come to the land of Canaan.”

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Rav Huna in the name of Rabbi Yehoshua bar Avin and Rabbi Zekharya, son-in-law of Rabbi Levi, in the name of Rabbi Levi: The Merciful One does not afflict human beings first. From whom do you derive it? From Job, as it is stated: “The oxen were plowing [and the donkeys grazing beside them, and Sheba fell upon them and took them]” (Job 1:14–15).11Before afflicting Job himself, God took away his possessions.

This teaches that the Holy One blessed be He showed him a sample of the World to Come, as it is stated: “The plowman will encounter the reaper” (Amos 9:13).12The midrash makes an ancillary point based on the fact that the donkeys were grazing alongside the oxen that were plowing. Generally there is nothing to graze in a field that has just been plowed. The midrash therefore derives that God gave a glimpse of the future reality described in Amos, in which the plowmen and reaper will work in the field at the same time because the produce will grow immediately.

“Sheba fell upon them and took them; [they smote the lads by the sword]” (Job 1:15). Rabbi Avin bar Kahana said: They went from the village of Kerainos, traveled through all the intervening towns, and arrived at the tower of Tzivaya and they died there.13The lads were taken captive along with the animals, and died of their wounds only after they had travelled with their captors. “Only [rak] I, alone, escaped to tell you” (Job 1:15).

Rabbi Yudan said: Everywhere that rak is stated, it is a limitation. He, too, was broken and stricken. Rabbi Yudan said: “Alone,” and it was incumbent upon me alone to tell you. He, too, once he heard, he immediately died.14Once Job heard the testimony of the lone survivor, that survivor died.

“This one was still speaking, and that one came and said: The Chaldeans set three columns [and staged a raid against the camels and took them; they smote the lads by the sword and only I alone escaped to tell you]” (Job 1:17). Rabbi Shmuel bar Naḥman said: When Job heard this he immediately began mobilizing his armies for war. That is what is written: “Because I feared the great horde and the contempt of families breaking me” (Job 31:34).

He said: ‘This nation is contemptible,’ as it is stated: “Behold, the land of the Chaldeans, this people that was not” (Isaiah 23:13) – that did not come other than to impose fear. Since it is stated: “A fire of God fell from the heavens” (Job 1:16), he said: ‘What can I do?’ “A voice fell from the heavens” (Daniel 4:28). ‘What can anyone do?’ “I would be silent and not go out of the entrance” (Job 31:34).

“He took for himself a potsherd to scratch with it” (Job 2:8).15This is because he was afflicted with severe boils (see Job 2:7). The same is true in Egypt. “He delivered their livestock to hail, their cattle to bolts of lightning” (Psalms 78:48). Then, “it struck their vines and their fig trees, and it broke the trees of their border” (Psalms 105:33).

Then, “He smote every firstborn in their land, the first fruits of all their vigor” (Psalms 105:36).16First God struck the Egyptians’ property and only then did He smite human beings. The same is true of Maḥlon and Kilyon. Initially, the attribute of justice affected their property, and then, “both of them, Maḥlon and Kilyon, died” (Ruth 1:5). Regarding leprosy that befalls a person, initially it befalls his house.

If he repents, it requires removal;17Removal of the stones; see Leviticus 14:40. if not, it requires demolition.18See Leviticus 14:45. It befalls his garments. If he repents, it requires laundering; if not, it requires burning.19See Leviticus 13:54–55. It befalls his body. If he repents, he is purified; if not, “he shall dwell in isolation” (Leviticus 13:46).

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Another matter, “when you will come to the land of Canaan.” They are seven nations, and you say “the land of Canaan”? The Rabbis say: It alluded to the fact that just as Ḥam castrated him and Canaan was punished; here, too, Israel sins and the land is cursed.20The Sages understood Ḥam to have castrated his father Noah (see Sanhedrin 70a, based on Genesis 9:22–24). In response, Noah cursed Ḥam’s son, Canaan (Genesis 9:25).

Similarly, the verse refers here to the Land of Canaan to indicate that when the land is struck, it is due to sin, in this case the sins of Israel. Rabbi Eliezer ben Yaakov and the Rabbis, Rabbi Eliezer says: It is because Canaan was the progenitor of them all.21The other six nations that inhabited the land were descendants of Canaan, and therefore the land is called the Land of Canaan. That is what is written: “Canaan begot Sidon his firstborn, and Ḥet” (Genesis 10:15).22The subsequent verses (Genesis 10:16–18) list various other sons of Canaan, some of whom were the progenitors of the nations that inhabited the Land of Canaan.

The Rabbis say: It is because they were all merchants, just as it says: “Whose merchants are princes; whose peddlers23The term for “its peddlers [kinaneha]” is grammatically related to the name Canaan. are the eminent of the land” (Isaiah 23:8). Rabbi Yosei ben Dosa said: Eliezer is Canaan.24Eliezer, the servant of Abraham (see Genesis 15:2), was a Canaanite. But because he served that righteous one, he emerged from the category of cursed and came into the category of blessed.

That is what is written: “He said: Cursed is Canaan” (Genesis 9:25), and it is written: “Come, blessed of the Lord” (Genesis 24:31).25This was stated by Lavan to the servant of Abraham, identified by the Sages as Eliezer. Rabbi Yaakov in the name of Rabbi Yehuda in the name of Rabbi Natan of Beit Guvrin employed this in requesting to take his leave.26When taking leave of his host or an important individual, he would mention this comment.

If Eliezer emerged from the category of cursed and came into the category of blessed because he served that righteous one; our brethren, Israel, who honor their prominent leaders, all the more so. Therefore, Moses cautions Israel: “When you will come to the land of Canaan.”

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And it is written: “I will place a mark of leprosy.” Rabbi Ḥiyya taught: Is this good tidings for them, that leprosy will befall them? Rabbi Shimon ben Yoḥai taught: When the Canaanites heard that Israel was coming upon them, they arose and concealed their money in the houses and in the fields. The Holy One blessed be He said: ‘I promised their ancestors that I will take their descendants into a land full of everything good,’ as it is stated: “Houses full of everything good” (Deuteronomy 6:11).

What does the Holy One blessed be He do? He brings leprosy in one’s house, and [the owner] demolishes it and finds the concealed cache. Who came and told the Canaanites that Israel was entering the land? Rabbi Yishmael bar Naḥman said: Joshua sent three missives to them.

One who wishes to evacuate, let him evacuate. One who wishes to make peace, let him make peace. One who wishes to wage war, let him do so. The Girgashite stood and evacuated; therefore they were given a land as fine as their [previous] land.

That is what is written: “Until I arrive and take you to a land like your land” (Isaiah 36:17); this is Africa. The Givonites made peace, as it is stated: “That the inhabitants of Givon had made peace” (Joshua 10:1). The thirty-one kings waged war and were defeated.

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“On a house in the land of your possession” (Leviticus 14:34), this is the Temple,27This is based on the fact that the verse refers to a house, singular, rather than houses, plural. It is thus understood to refer to a house that is singularly unique (Maharzu). as it is stated: “Behold, I am profaning My Temple, the pride of your strength” (Ezekiel 24:21). “The one to whom the house belongs shall come” (Leviticus 14:35), this is the Holy One blessed be He, as it is stated: “Because of My house that is destroyed” (Haggai 1:9).

“And tell the priest” (Leviticus 14:35), this is Jeremiah, as it is stated: “Of the priests that are in Anatot” (Jeremiah 1:1). “Something like a mark appears to be in the house” (Leviticus 14:35), this is the filth of idol worship. Some say: This is the idol of Manasseh. That is what is written: “Behold, north of the altar gate, the image of provocation in the entry [babia]” (Ezekiel 8:5).

What is babia? Woe, woe [bia bia] that the resident evacuates the owner from his house. Rabbi Berekhya said: It is written: “For the bedding is too short for stretching out” (Isaiah 28:20); the bed cannot hold a woman, her husband, and her paramour together. Rather, “the cover is too narrow for taking cover [kehitkanes]” (Isaiah 28:20); you have created a great rival for Him of whom it is written: “He gathers [kones] sea water like a mound” (Psalms 33:7).28Because Israel engaged in idolatry, God removed His presence from their midst and from the Temple.

“The priest shall command and they shall empty the house” (Leviticus 14:36) – “He took the treasures of the House of the Lord” (I Kings 14:26). “He shall demolish the house” (Leviticus 14:45) – “He demolished this House” (Ezra 5:12). “He shall take it outside the city” (Leviticus 14:45) – “and exiled the people to Babylon” (Ezra 5:12). One might [think] it will be forever; the verse states: “They shall take other stones” (Leviticus 14:42), as it is stated: “Therefore, so said the Lord God: Behold, I am laying a foundation in Zion, a stone, a trial stone, a precious cornerstone of a sturdy foundation; the faithful will not hurry” (Isaiah 28:16).

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“Speak to the children of Israel, and say to them: Any man, when he has a discharge from his flesh, his discharge is impure” (Leviticus 15:2). “Speak to the children of Israel, and say to them: Any man, when he has a discharge from his flesh…” That is what is written: “Remember your Creator in the days of your youth” (Ecclesiastes 12:1). We learned, Akavya ben Mahalalel says: Consider three matters and you will not come to sin: Know from where you came – from a putrid drop; where you are going – to dust, maggots, and worms; and before Whom you are destined to give a reckoning – before the King of kings, the Holy One blessed be He.1Mishna Avot 3:1.

Rabbi Abba bar Kahana said in the name of Rav Pappi, and Rabbi Yehoshua of Sikhnin in the name of Rabbi Levi: Rabbi Akiva expounded all three of them from a single verse. “Remember your Creator [bore’ekha]” – your well [be’erekha], putrid liquid. Your pit [borekha], this is maggots and worms. Your Creator [bore’ekha], this is the King of kings, the Holy One blessed be He, before Whom you are destined to give a reckoning.

“In the days of your youth,” in the days of your youthfulness, when your strength is still with you. “Before the evil days will come” (Ecclesiastes 12:1), these are the days of dotage. “And the years arrive when you will say, I have no desire in them” (Ecclesiastes 12:1), these are the messianic days, in which there is neither merit nor liability.2Some commentaries prefer the version of the text found in Kohelet Rabba (12:1): “this is suffering” (see Maharzu).

Others explain that in the messianic era there will be no poor people, and therefore no ability for the rich to earn merit through charity or to incur liability by refusing to contribute to charity (Etz Yosef). “Before the sun, the light, [the moon, and the stars] will darken” (Ecclesiastes 12:2). “The sun,” this is [a person’s] countenance.3A person’s countenance changes in old age. “The light,” this is the forehead.

“The moon,” this is the nose. “And the stars,” these are the cheekbones. “The clouds will return after the rain” (Ecclesiastes 12:2). Rabbi Levi said two [explanations], one for the scholars and one for the ignoramuses.

One to the scholars: When someone comes to weep, his eyes shed tears [copiously]. One to the ignoramuses: When someone comes to urinate, feces precede it. “On the day that the guards of the house will tremble, [the valiant men will be twisted, the grinders will cease because they have dwindled, it will be dark for the gazers through the windows]” (Ecclesiastes 12:3). “On the day that the guards of the house will tremble,” these are one’s knees.

“The valiant men will be bent,” these are one’s ribs. Rabbi Ḥiyya bar Naḥman said: These are one’s arms. “The grinders will cease,” this is the stomach. “Because they have dwindled,” these are the teeth.

“It will be dark for the gazers through the windows,” these are the eyes. Rabbi Ḥiyya bar Naḥman said: These are the nodes of the lungs from which the voice emerges. “The doors to the street will be shut” (Ecclesiastes 12:4), these are a person’s orifices that are like a door that opens and closes. “With the fading of the noise of the mill (Ecclesiastes 12:4), because the stomach no longer grinds.

“And one will arise to the voice of a bird” – this elderly man, when he hears the sound of birds chirping, he says in his heart: Robbers are coming to overwhelm me. “And all the sources of music will be lowered” (Ecclesiastes 12:4), these are his lips. Rabbi Ḥiyya bar Neḥemya said: These are the kidneys, which think and the heart concludes. 4The midrash presents thought as being initiated by the kidneys and concluded by the heart, before it is expressed by the lips.

“They will also be fearful of heights, [and obstacles on the way; the almond tree will blossom, but the grasshopper will be burdened; the caper berry will fail. For the man goes to his eternal home, and the mourners will circle in the streets]” (Ecclesiastes 12:5). “They will also be fearful of heights,” this is the elderly man to whom they call: ‘Go to such and such place,’ and he says: ‘Are there ascents there, are there descents there?’5He is loathe to travel if he will have to go uphill or downhill.

“And obstacles [veḥatḥatim] on the way,” Rabbi Abba bar Kahana and Rabbi Levi, Rabbi Abba bar Kahana: The fear [ḥitita] of the way descends upon him. The other said: He begins to delineate [matve] routes [teva’im]. He says until such and such place I can go, to such and such place I cannot go. “The almond tree will blossom,” these are the ankles.

“But the grasshopper will be burdened,” this is the nut-sized bone attached to the spine. Hadrian, may his bones be crushed, asked Rabbi Yehoshua ben Ḥananya, he said to him: ‘From where will the Holy One blessed be He cause man to blossom in the future?’6When a person comes back to life at the resurrection of the dead. He said to him: ‘From the nut-sized bone attached to the spine.’ He said to him: ‘From where can you prove this to me?’

He brought one before him. He placed it in water, but it did not dissolve. He ground it in a mill, but it was not ground. He placed it in fire, but it did not burn.

He placed it on an anvil and began striking it with a hammer. The anvil divided and the hammer split, but it was to no avail. “The caper berry will fail,” this is the desire that promotes harmony between a man and his wife.7The desire for marital relations. Rabbi Shimon ben Ḥalafta would ascend and greet Rabbi [Yehuda HaNasi] each and every month.

When he grew old, he sat and was unable to ascend. One day he ascended. [Rabbi Yehuda HaNasi] said to him: ‘With what are you occupied, that you do not ascend to me in the manner that you were accustomed?’ He said: ‘The far have become near, the near have become far, two have become three, and the promoter of harmony in the house is abolished.’. “For the man goes to his eternal home” – “the eternal home” is not stated, but rather “his eternal home.”

This teaches that each and every righteous person has a world to himself. This is analogous to a king who enters the province, and with him are generals, governors, and soldiers. Even though they all enter a single gate, each and every one is accommodated according to his standing. So, too, even though everyone tastes the taste of death, each and every righteous person has a world to himself.

“And the mourners will circle in the streets,” these are the worms. “Before the silver cord will be severed” (Ecclesiastes 12:6), this is the spinal column. “The golden bowl will be shattered” (Ecclesiastes 12:6), this is the skull. Rabbi Ḥiyya bar Neḥemya said: This is the esophagus that finishes the gold and expends the silver.8A glutton spends much of his resources, represented here as gold and silver, on food.

“The pitcher will be broken at the spring” (Ecclesiastes 12:6); Rabbi Ḥiyya son of Rabbi Pappi and Rabbi Yehoshua of Sikhnin in the name of Rabbi Levi: Three days after [death], a person’s stomach bursts and passes [its contents] to the mouth and says to it: ‘Take for yourself what you robbed and pilfered and gave to me.’ Rabbi Ḥagai in the name of Rabbi Yitzḥak cited it from this verse: “I will scatter dung upon your faces, the dung of your festive offerings” (Malachi 2:3).

Rabbi Abba son of Rav Pappi and Rabbi Yehoshua of Sikhnin in the name of Rabbi Levi: For the first three days, the soul hovers over the body, thinking that it will return to it. When it sees that the aura of the countenance has changed, it goes on its way, as it is written: “But his flesh [on him is painful, and his soul mourns over him]” (Job 14:22). Bar Kappara said: The full intensity of mourning remains for three days.

Why? Because the form of the face is recognizable, as we learned: One may testify only regarding the countenance of the face with the nose…and one may testify only up to three days.9Mishna Yevamot 16:3. The point is that one can testify that someone has died only if one sees the entire face of the corpse while it is intact, including the nose, and only if one sees it within three days of the person’s death.

“The wheel will be smashed into the cistern” (Ecclesiastes 12:6). Two amora’im, one said: Like those wheels of Tzippori.10Tzippori was located in the mountains, and its wells extended deep into the ground. Water was drawn using a long rope attached to a wheel. This is representative of a corpse being lowered into a grave (Etz Yosef).

One said: Like the clods in Tiberias, as it is stated: “The clods of the stream are sweet to him” (Job 21:33).11Tiberias is located in an area with many streams of water that flow into the nearby Sea of Galilee. These streams carry with them stones, which are smoothed by the running water and were used to cover graves. Thus, the wheel [galgal] of the verse is understood as referring to the stones covering a grave [golel].

“The dust returns to the earth as it was, [and the spirit returns to God who bestowed it]” (Ecclesiastes 12:7). Rabbi Pinḥas and Rabbi Ḥilkiya [said] in the name of Rabbi Simon: When will the spirit return to God who bestowed it? It is when the dust returns to the earth as it was.12If the body, made from the dust of the earth, returns to it free of sin, as it was before the person lived his life, i.e., if the person was righteous and died free of sin.

If not, “may He cast away the souls of your enemies …” (I Samuel 25:29).13God will cast away the souls of the sinners. Rabbi Yishmael bar Naḥman taught in the name of Rabbi Avdimi of Haifa: [This is analogous] to a priest who was meticulous regarding ritual purity, who gave a loaf of teruma bread to a priest who was negligent regarding ritual purity. He said to him: ‘Look, I am pure, my house is pure, and the loaf that I gave you is pure.

If you give it [back] to me in the manner that I gave it to you, fine. If not, I will cast it before you.’ So too, the Holy One blessed be He says to each person: ‘Look, I am pure, My abode is pure, My attendants are pure, and the soul that I placed in you was pure. If you return it to me in the manner that I give it to you, fine.

If not, behold, I will cast it before you.’ All this befalls him in the days of his dotage. But in the days of his youth, if he sins he is afflicted with discharges and leprosy. Therefore, Moses cautions Israel and says to them: “Any man, when he has a discharge from his flesh.”

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Another matter, “any man, when he has a discharge from his flesh,” this is what the verse said: “It is terrifying and awesome, from it will emerge its justice and its burden” (Habakkuk 1:7).14This verse refers to the Chaldean nation, but in Hebrew the pronouns can be read as either “it” or “he.” The midrash adopts the second reading, and applies the verse to various individuals. “It is terrifying and awesome,” this is Adam the first man.

Rabbi Yehuda bar Simon in the name of Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi: When the Holy One blessed be He created Adam the first man, He created him such that he filled the whole world in its entirety. [He filled the world] from east to west, as it is stated: “Back and front You shaped me” (Psalms 139:5).15Front [kedem] is also a term used for east (see, e.g., Exodus 27:13). From north to south, as it is stated: “From one end of the heavens to the other end” (Deuteronomy 4:32).

From where is it derived that [he filled] even the space of the world?16The space between heaven and earth. The verse states: “You placed Your palm upon me” (Psalms 139:5). “From it will emerge its justice and its burden,” this is Eve. That is what is written: “The man said: The woman whom You gave to be with me, she gave me [from the tree, and I ate]” (Genesis 3:12).17That sin brought upon him the “justice and burden” – the punishment of death.

Another matter, “it is terrifying and awesome,” this is Esau. That is what is written: “Rebecca took the garments of Esau, her elder [hagadol] son” (Genesis 27:15).18According to the Sages, these garments had belonged to Adam, and then eventually belonged to Nimrod, and Esau killed Nimrod and took them (see Bereshit Rabba 65:16). Since Nimrod himself was described as having been mighty (see Genesis 10:9), Esau must have been “terrifying and awesome” (Etz Yosef).

“From it will emerge its justice and its burden,” this is Obadiah. Rabbi Yitzḥak said: Obadiah was an Edomite convert and he prophesied regarding Edom: “There will be no survivor for the house of Esau” (Obadiah 1:18). Another matter, “it is terrifying and awesome,” this is Sennacherib, as it is written: “Who among all the gods of these lands has delivered their land from my hand?” (Isaiah 36:20). “From it will emerge its justice and its burden,” these are his sons.

“It was as he was prostrating himself in the temple of Nisrokh, his god, that Adramelekh and Saretzer, his sons, smote him with the sword” (II Kings 19:37). Another matter, “it is terrifying and awesome,” this is Hiram king of Tyre, as it is written: “Son of man, say to the prince of Tyre: So said the Lord God: Because your heart became haughty” (Ezekiel 28:2). “From it will emerge its justice and its burden,” this is Nebuchadnezzar.

Rabbi Simon said: There is an aggadic tradition that Hiram was the husband of Nebuchadnezzar’s mother. [Nebuchadnezzar] rose against him and killed him. That is what is written: “I took out a fire from your midst; it devoured you” (Ezekiel 28:18). Another matter, “it is terrifying and awesome,” this is Nebuchadnezzar. “You said in your heart: I will ascend to the heavens” (Isaiah 14:13).

“From it will emerge its justice and its burden,” this is Evil Merodakh. They said: For all those seven years that passed for Nebuchadnezzar,19Nebuchadnezzar spent seven years roaming as an animal in the forest; see Daniel 4:22. they took Evil Merodakh and crowned him in his stead. When he returned, he took him20Nebuchadnezzar took Evil Merodakh. and incarcerated him in prison. Anyone who entered prison in the days of [Nebuchadnezzar] would never emerge from there, as it is stated: “Who never released his prisoners homeward” (Isaiah 14:17).

When [Nebuchadnezzar] died, they approached Evil Merodakh to crown him. He said to them: ‘I will not heed you. Initially, I heeded you, and he took me and incarcerated me in prison. Now, he will kill me.’

He did not believe them until they dragged [Nebuchadnezzar’s corpse] and cast him before him. That is what is written: “But you were cast from your grave” (Isaiah 14:19). Rabbi Avina said: Moreover, each and every enemy that he had would come and stab his [corpse] with the sword, to realize what was stated: “Clad in the garb of corpses, stabbed with a sword” (Isaiah 14:19). Another matter, “it is terrifying and awesome,” this is Israel, as it is written: “I had said: You are divine” (Psalms 82:6).

“From it will emerge its justice and its burden,” they were afflicted with discharges and leprosy. Therefore, Moses cautions Israel and says to them: “Any man, when he has a discharge from his flesh.”

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Another matter, “any man, when he has a discharge from his flesh,” that is what the verse said: “On the day of your planting it will flourish, and in the morning your seed will blossom” (Isaiah 17:11). “On the day of your planting,” on the day that I planted you to be My people, you created waste, just as it says: “They have become the dross of silver” (Ezekiel 22:18). “It will flourish [tesagsegi]” – you distorted [shagishtun] the path.

That is what is written: “[Ardent lips but an evil heart] are silver dross coating earthenware.” (Proverbs 26:23).21After saying: “Everything that God said we will perform and we will heed” (Exodus 24:7), they then said, at the sin of the Golden Calf: “This is your god, Israel” (Exodus 32:4). Alternatively, tesagsegi, you deceived [shagishtum] Me. That is what is written: “But they beguiled Him with their mouth and lied to Him with their tongue.

Their heart was not steadfast toward Him, and they were not faithful to His covenant” (Psalms 78:36–37). “And in the morning your seed will blossom.” Rabbi Ḥama bar Ḥanina and Rabbi Yishmael bar Naḥman, Rabbi Ḥama bar Ḥanina said: This is analogous to one who had a furrow filled with vegetables. He awoke in the morning and found it stricken with chlorosis.

Rabbi Yishmael bar Naḥman said: It is analogous to one who had a furrow filled with flax. He awoke in the morning and found it had become stalks.22It had become hard and ruined. “The harvest will be lost [nad]” (Isaiah 17:11) – you brought [nidnadtem] upon yourselves the travails of the kingdom,23Subjugation to foreign powers. the travails of suffering, and the travails of the angel of death, as Rabbi Yoḥanan said in the name of Rabbi Eiezer son of Rabbi Yosei Hagelili: When Israel stood at Mount Sinai and said: “Everything that God said we will perform and we will heed” (Exodus 24:7), at that moment, the Holy One blessed be He summoned the angel of death and said to him: ‘Even though I granted you dominion over people, you have no dealings with this nation.

Why? Because they are My children.’ That is what is written: “You are children to the Lord your God” (Deuteronomy 14:1). And it says: “It was when you heard the voice from the midst of the darkness” (Deuteronomy 5:20).

Is there darkness On High? But is it not written: “Light rests with Him”? (Daniel 2:22). Rather, this is the angel of death, who is called darkness. That is what is written: “The tablets were the work of God [and the writing was the writing of God, engraved [ḥarut] on the tablets]” (Exodus 32:16).

Do not read it as engraved [ḥarut], but rather, freedom [ḥerut]. Rabbi Yehuda, Rabbi Neḥemya, and the Rabbis, Rabbi Yehuda said: Freedom from the angel of death. Rabbi Neḥemya said: Freedom from the kingdoms. The Rabbis say: Freedom from suffering.

“On a day of inheritance [naḥala]” (Isaiah 17:11), on the day that I bequeathed [hinḥalti] you the Torah. “And mortal pain” (Isaiah 17:11), Rabbi Yoḥanan and the Rabbis, Rabbi Yoḥanan said: You brought upon yourselves an affliction that flows and exhausts. The Rabbis say: You brought upon yourselves an affliction that overwhelms and drains. Which is that?

It is discharge and leprosy. Therefore, Moses cautions Israel and says to them: “Any man, when he has a discharge from his flesh.”

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Rabbi Shimon ben Yoḥai taught: When Israel stood at Mount Sinai and said: “Everything that God said we will perform and we will heed” (Exodus 24:7), at that moment there were not among them one who experienced a discharge, or [one who was] a leper, nor lame, nor blind, nor mute, nor deaf, nor imbecile. Regarding that moment it says: “All of you is fair, my love, and there is no blemish in you” (Song of Songs 4:7).

Once they sinned, not even a brief time passed until those who experienced a discharge and lepers were found among them. Regarding that moment it says: “They shall expel from the camp every leper, and anyone with a discharge…” (Numbers 5:2). From what did Israel incur liability to [be struck with] discharge and leprosy? Rav Huna said in the name of Rabbi Hoshaya: It is because they would cast aspersions on their prominent leaders and say: ‘Does the family of so-and-so not include lepers?’

This is to teach you that leprosy comes only for slander. That is why Israel was liable for discharge and leprosy. Rabbi Tanḥuma says: It is because they would cast aspersions on the Ark and say: ‘This Ark kills its bearers.’ Leprosy comes only for slander; that is why Israel was liable for discharge and leprosy.

The Rabbis say: It was because of the calf, as it is written: “Moses saw the people, that it was exposed [farua]” (Exodus 32:25), that leprosy blossomed in them, just as it says: “The hair of his head shall grow unchecked [farua]” (Leviticus 13:45).24This is stated in regard to the leper. Rabbi Yehuda bar Rabbi Simon said: It was because of the complainers, as it is stated: “Until it comes out of your nose, and it shall be loathsome [lezara] for you” (Numbers 11:20).

What is [the meaning of] loathsome [lezara]? Rabbi Huna said: It shall be for vomit [lezarna] and excrement. Reish Lakish said: It shall be for diphtheria [askera]. Rabbi Abba said: As a warning [azhara].

Rabbi Evyatar said: For ticks [lekarda].25Insects that are attracted to flesh as it begins to disintegrate. Rabbi Shimon ben Yoḥai said: It is just that you distance it more than you [now] seek to draw it near. Rabbi Yehuda bar Rabbi Simon said: From here they became strangers [zarim] to the Tent of Meeting.26They experienced discharges and became lepers, and therefore were unable to approach the Tent of Meeting.

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Rabbi Yehoshua of Sikhnin in the name of Rabbi Levi: A flesh and blood [king] imposes exile, and the Holy One blessed be He imposes exile, as it is stated: “Command the children of Israel and they shall expel from the camp” (Numbers 5:2). A flesh and blood [king] incarcerates in prison and the Holy One blessed be He incarcerates in prison, as it is stated: “The priest shall quarantine the leprous mark” (Leviticus 13:4).

A flesh and blood [king] decrees banishment and the Holy One blessed be He decrees banishment: “He shall dwell in isolation, outside the camp is his dwelling” (Leviticus 13:46). A flesh and blood [king] administers flogging and the Holy One blessed be He administers flogging: “Forty he shall flog him, he shall not add” (Deuteronomy 25:3). A flesh and blood [king] collects fines and the Holy One blessed be He collects fines, “they shall penalize him one hundred silver pieces” (Deuteronomy 22:19).

A flesh and blood [king] provides provisions and the Holy One blessed be He provides provisions, “behold I am raining food for you from the heavens” (Exodus 16:4). A flesh and blood [king] grants promotions and the Holy One blessed be He grants promotions, “take a census…” (Numbers 1:2).27“Se’u et rosh” literally “raise the head,” promote them. A flesh and blood [king] provides rations and the Holy One blessed be He provides rations, “an omer per person according to the number of your people” (Exodus 16:16).

A flesh and blood [king] strikes a person due to [testimony] of witnesses, but the Holy One blessed be He strikes him Himself, “I crushed and I will heal” (Deuteronomy 32:39). Rabbi Berekhya said in the name of Rabbi Levi: A flesh and blood [king] strikes with a blade and heals with a bandage, but the Holy One blessed be He heals with that with which He strikes, as it is stated: “For I will bring a remedy for you, and from your wounds I will heal you” (Jeremiah 30:17).28The healing will arise from the wound.

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“And a woman, if her bloody discharge will flow many days not at the time of her menstruation, or if it will flow beyond her menstruation; for all the days of the discharge of her impurity she shall be like during the days of her menstruation; she is impure” (Leviticus 15:25). “And a woman, if her bloody discharge will flow many days,” this is what the verse said: “His head is the finest gold; [his locks are curls, black as a raven]” (Song of Songs 5:11).

“His head [rosho],” this is Torah, as it is written: “The Lord made me at the beginning [reshit] of His way” (Proverbs 8:22),1This chapter of Proverbs is stated as though from the perspective of wisdom, which is understood to refer to Torah. as Rav Huna said in the name of Reish Lakish: The Torah preceded creation of the world by two thousand years, as it is stated: “I was with Him, as a protégé; [I was a delight day after day]” (Proverbs 8:30), and the day of the Holy One blessed be He is one thousand years, as it is stated: “For one thousand years in Your eyes [are like yesterday]” (Psalms 90:4).

“The finest gold,” these are matters of Torah, as it is stated: “They are more desirable than gold, than quantities of fine gold” (Psalms 19:11). Matters that were created from the beginning were engraved in the finest gold.2Some interpret this as a reference to the Ten Commandments. According to the Sages, they were engraved upon tablets of sapphire, which were as valuable as fine gold (Etz Yosef).

“His locks are curls [taltalim],” this is the scoring.3Indentations made in the parchment to ensure that the lines of the Torah are written straight. “Black [sheḥorot] as a raven [kaorev],” these are the strokes of the letters – this is the statement of Rabbi Eliezer. Rabbi Yehoshua says: In whom are the piles4Taltalim is expounded as tilei tilim, piles upon piles. [of halakhot] sustained? It is in one who begins early [mashḥir] and ends late [maariv] in their [study].

Rabbi Shmuel bar Ami said: Matters of Torah require beginning early and ending late, as it is stated: “Who prepares for the raven its prey, [when its young cry to God, wandering without food]?” (Job 38:41).5Some assert that this verse addresses the unstated question: If a person commits himself to Torah study how will he earn a living? The verse indicates that just as God supports the ravens He supports those who study Torah and rely upon Him (see Etz Yosef).

Learn from Elijah. Through his beginning early and ending late in Torah, did I not already appoint ravens for him, as it is stated: “The ravens would bring him bread and meat….” (I Kings 17:6). From where would they bring it to him? It was from the table of Yehoshafat.

Rabbi Shmuel bar Ami said: Matters of Torah require beginning early and ending late. From where will sustenance come? “Who prepares for the raven its prey, [when its young cry to God, wandering without food]?” So too, if a person does not become cruel to his body, to his children, and to his household, like this raven, he will not merit matters of Torah.6If a person does not fully dedicate himself to Torah study, even at the expense of his livelihood, he will not excel in Torah scholarship.

Rabbi Asi was inquisitive. He saw a certain raven. It prepared a nest, produced eggs, produced fledglings. He took them and placed them in a new pot and sealed it over them for three days.

After three days, he opened it to see what they were doing. He found that they had produced excrement, the excrement produced gnats, and [the ravens] were flying above them and eating them. He read this verse in their regard. “Who prepares for the raven its prey, [when its young cry to God, wandering without food]?”

Rabbi Yoḥanan and Reish Lakish, Rabbi Yoḥanan said: The song of Torah is only at night, as it is stated: “Arise, sing out at night” (Lamentations 2:19).7This means that the primary time for Torah study is at night, when people are generally not working. Reish Lakish said: During the day and at night, as it is stated: “You shall ponder it day and night” (Joshua 1:8). Reish Lakish was interpreting verses and when he would arrive at these verses: “She rises while it is yet night” (Proverbs 31:15), [and] “Arise, sing out at night” (Lamentations 2:19), he said: Rabbi Yoḥanan taught me well.

He then said: Do you not see how my Torah study shines on my face? Why? It is because it is during the day and at night.

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Rabbi Ḥanin of Tzippori interpreted the verse regarding a mound of dirt.8He interpreted the verse “his locks are curls [taltalim]” as alluding to a mount [telulit] of dirt. One who is foolish, what does he say? Who can remove this? One who is clever, what does he say?

I will remove two basketsful today, two basketsful tomorrow, until I remove it all. So too, one who is foolish says: Who can study the Torah? Nezikin is thirty chapters,9Bava Kamma, Bava Metzia, and Bava Batra each contain ten chapters, and are considered one integrated tractate (see Bava Kamma 102a). Kelim is thirty chapters.

One who is clever, what does he say? I will study two halakhot today and two halakhot tomorrow, until I study all the Torah in its entirety. Rabbi Ami said: “Wisdom is lofty to a fool” (Proverbs 24:7). Rabbi Yoḥanan said: [This is analogous] to a loaf that is suspended in the air in a house.

One who is foolish says: Who can take this down? One who is clever says: Did another not suspend it? He brings two reeds and attaches them to one another and takes it down. So too, one who is foolish says: Who can learn all the Torah that is in the heart of the Sage?

One who is clever says: Did he not learn it from another? Rather, I will study two halakhot today and two tomorrow until I study all the Torah in its entirety. Rabbi Levi said: [This is analogous] to a perforated basket whose owner hired workers to fill it. One who is foolish, what does he say?

What am I accomplishing? I fill it from here and it flows out from there. One who is clever, what does he say? Do I not receive a salary for each and every barrel?10He is paid for each barrel that he empties into the basket, regardless of what ultimately happens to its contents.

So too, one who is foolish, what does he say? What do I accomplish by studying Torah and forgetting it? One who is clever, what does he say? Does the Holy One blessed be He not give reward for effort?

Rabbi Ze’ira said: Even matter that you see as dots [kotzim] in the Torah, they are heaps upon heaps [tilei tilim]; they have the capability to destroy the world and to render it a mound [tel], just as it says: “It shall be an eternal mound, it shall not be rebuilt” (Deuteronomy 13:17). Rabbi Alexandri bar Ḥagai said Rabbi Alexandri Kerova:11He was so called because he would serve as a prayer leader and would recite liturgical poems called kerovot (Matnot Kehuna), or simply because he would lead the congregation in coming close [karov] to God.

If all the nations of the world were to assemble to whiten one wing of the raven, they would be unable to do so. So too, if all the nations of the world were to assemble to uproot one matter from the Torah, they would be unable to do so. From whom do you learn this? It is from Solomon.

Because he sought to uproot one letter from the Torah,12In Deuteronomy 17:16–17 a king is commanded not to amass [lo yarbeh] horses lest he lead the nation back to Egypt, and not to amass wives lest his heart be led astray. Without the yod, the word yarbeh would be rava, which would not be a command. Thus, the verse would mean that if the king does not amass horses he will not lead the nation back to Egypt and if he does not amass wives they will not cause his heart to stray, but that would not mean it is prohibited for him to amass horses or wives.

Solomon amassed horses and wives, thinking that he would avoid the pitfalls the verse warns against, but he did not avoid those pitfalls (Sanhedrin 21b). a prosecutor arose. Who prosecuted him? Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi said: The yod of yarbeh prosecuted him. Rabbi Shimon taught: The book of Deuteronomy ascended and prostrated itself before the Holy One blessed be He.

It said before Him: ‘Master of the universe, Solomon has uprooted me and rendered me an invalid document, as any document in which two or three matters are invalidated from it, it is completely invalidated. King Solomon sought to uproot a yod from me. It is written: “He shall not amass wives for himself” (Deuteronomy 17:17), but he amassed for himself. “He shall not amass horses for himself” (Deuteronomy 17:16), but he amassed horses for himself.

“And silver and gold he shall not amass” (Deuteronomy 17:17), but he amassed silver and gold for himself.’ The Holy One blessed be He said to it: ‘Go; Solomon and one hundred like him will be void, and a yod from you will never be void.’ Rav Huna said in the name of Rav Aḥa: The yod that the Holy One blessed be He took from the name of Sarah, He divided it in two and gave half to Abraham and half to Sarah.13The numerical value of the yod in Sarai, Sarah’s original name, is ten.

He ‘divided it’ into two, leaving two of the letter heh, each worth five, instead of one yod. He added one heh to Abram, rendering his name Abraham, and one to Sarai, rendering her name Sarah. Rabbi Yehoshua ben Korḥa said: The yod of Sarah14The yod that had been removed from her name, Sarai, when it was changed to Sarah. ascended and prostrated itself before the Holy One blessed be He. It said before Him: ‘Master of the universe, You uprooted me from the name of that righteous woman.’

The Holy One blessed be He said to it: ‘Go; in the past you were in the name of a female at the end of the word, but now, I will place you in the name of a male at the beginning of the word.’ That is what is written: “Moses called Hoshea bin Nun, Joshua [Yehoshua]” (Numbers 13:16). “Hear Israel, the Lord is our God, the Lord is one [eḥad]” (Deuteronomy 6:4); if you render the dalet a reish, you destroy the world in its entirety.15The word one [eḥad] would become other [aḥer], turning this affirmation of faith into a declaration of heresy.

This occurs by merely erasing one small stroke of the dalet, thereby turning it into a resh. “For you shall not prostrate yourself to another [aḥer] god” (Exodus 34:14); if you render the reish a dalet, you destroy the world in its entirety.16If you read the verse as though it said “you shall not prostrate yourself to the one God,” the result would be disastrous. “You shall not profane [yeḥalelu] My holy name” (Leviticus 22:32); if you render the ḥet a heh, it will result in you destroying the world in its entirety.17Profane [yeḥalelu] would become praise [yehalelu].

“Let all who breathe, praise [tehalel] the Lord, Halleluya” (Psalms 150:6); if you render the heh a ḥet, you destroy the world.18That would be saying: Let all who breathe profane [yeḥalelu] My holy name. “They have denied the Lord” (Jeremiah 5:12); if you render the bet a kaf, you destroy the world.19“The Lord [baHashem]” would become: Like the Lord [kaHashem], which implies that the Lord also denies truths.

“They have betrayed the Lord [baHashem]” (Hosea 5:7); if you render the bet a kaf, you destroy the world.20“The Lord [baHashem]” will become: Like the Lord [kaHashem], implying that the Lord betrays others. “There is none sacred like the Lord [kaHashem]” (I Samuel 2:2); if you render the kaf a beit, you destroy the world.21That would be saying: “There is nothing sacred in the Lord [baHashem].” “There is none besides You [ein biltekha]” (I Samuel 2:2); Rabbi Abba bar Kahana said: Everything erodes [bala], but You do not erode. Ein biltekha, none outlasts You [ein levalotekha].

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Rabbi Yehuda bar Rabbi Simon interpreted the verse regarding Torah scholars. One verse says: “Black like ravens” and one verse says: “His appearance is like Lebanon, choice like cedar” (Song of Songs 5:15), and it is written: “Their appearance is like torches, they dash like lightning” (Nahum 2:5). Rather, these are Torah personalities, who appear ugly and black in this world, but in the future, “their appearance is like torches.”

Rabbi Shmuel bar Yitzḥak interpreted the verse regarding the portions of the Torah. Even though they appear as though they are too ugly and black to recite them in public, e.g., the halakhot of discharges, leprosy, a menstruating woman, and a woman who has given birth, the Holy One blessed be He said: ‘They are pleasant to Me,’ as it is stated: “The offering of Judah and Jerusalem will be pleasant to the Lord…” (Malachi 3:4).

Know that it is so, as the portion regarding the male who experiences a discharge and the female who experiences a discharge were not stated as one; rather, this one by itself, and that one by itself. “Any man, when he has a discharge from his flesh” (Leviticus 15:2). “And a woman, if her bloody discharge will flow…” (Leviticus 15:25).

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Rabbi Kohen began: “Through slothfulness the ceiling sags [and through idleness of the hands the house leaks]” (Ecclesiastes 10:18). Because Israel was slothful from encamping before Mount Sinai in dispute,22Although the Israelites had engaged in disputes in their other encampments, when they encamped at Sinai they did so peacefully. “the ceiling sags,” – “the Lord descended upon Mount Sinai” (Exodus 19:20); “He bent the heavens and descended” (Psalms 18:10).23God descended to them and rested His presence in their midst.

“And through idleness of the hands,” because Israel was idle from encamping in dispute, “the house leaks,” “the clouds, too, dripped water” (Judges 5:4). Another matter, “through slothfulness the ceiling sags,” because Israel was slothful in repenting during the days of Jeremiah, “the ceiling sags” – “He uncovered the covering of Judah” (Isaiah 22:8); He exposed what was concealed. “And through idleness of the hands,” because they were idle from repenting during the days of Jeremiah, “the house leaks” – “for, behold, the Lord commands, and He will shatter the great house24The ten tribes of the kingdom of Israel. into smithereens and the small house25The two tribes of the kingdom of Judah. into fragments” (Amos 6:11).

This shattering into smithereens is unlike the shattering into fragments. This shattering into smithereens, there are slivers from it, while the shattering into fragments, there are no slivers from it.26When something is shattered into smithereens the tiny slivers cannot possibly be reconstructed into a whole. When something is broken into fragments the pieces are large enough to be usable and reconstructed (Etz Yosef).

They are not identical. Another matter, “through slothfulness the ceiling sags” – because a person is too slothful to cover his head properly, “the ceiling sags,” he becomes congested with a head cold. “And through idleness of the hands,” because a person is idle and does not dry his body properly, “the house leaks,” he develops infections. Rabbi Abahu interpreted the verse regarding a woman.

Because a woman is too slothful to cover herself properly, “the ceiling sags,” that is what is written: “And he uncovered her nakedness, he has probed her source and she has exposed the source of her blood” (Leviticus 20:18). “And through idleness of the hands,” because a woman is idle and does not examine herself at her proper time, “the house leaks,” she will be inundated with blood. That is what is written: “And a woman, if her bloody discharge will flow many days.”

Tavita, the maidservant of Rabban Gamliel, was examining barrels [of wine]. When she had a sensation,27She sensed that she was experiencing menstrual bleeding. she sat. He said to her: ‘Are they sour?’ She said to him: ‘No.’ When he understood, he said: ‘Alas, the wine is lost!’28He was assuming that she had impurified all the barrels due to her status as a menstruating woman, and bemoaning the fact that he would be unable to partake of the wine in ritual purity.

She said to him: ‘For each and every barrel I would examine myself, and I had a sensation only with this one.’ He said to her: ‘May the tranquility of your soul be given to you, just as you gave the tranquility of my soul to me.’

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Another matter, “and a woman, if her bloody discharge will flow many days” – that is what the verse said: “For many days, Israel was without the true God, and without a teaching priest, and without Torah” (II Chronicles 15:3). Who prophesied this verse? Azarya ben Oded the prophet said: ‘Days are destined to befall Israel “without the true God,” as the attribute of justice will not be implemented in the world.’29Therefore, the wicked will not be punished and the righteous will suffer.

“Without a teaching priest,” as the high priesthood is destined to be abolished. “And without Torah,” as the Sanhedrin is destined to be abolished. When that generation heard this, their hands weakened.30They became discouraged. A Divine Voice emerged and said: “Strengthen weak hands” (Isaiah 35:3).

Rabbi Yudan and Rabbi Pinḥas, Rabbi Yudan said: “Strengthen weak hands,” hands that appeared as though they are weak. “And support failing knees” (Isaiah 35:3), that appear as though they are failing.31Rabbi Yudan interprets the verse as referring to God. The prophet thus says to Israel: Increase your good deeds so that God, who now appears in this world as though He were weak, will reveal His power (Rabbi David Luria).

Rabbi Pinḥas said: “Strengthen weak hands,” as you have weakened yourselves with your wicked deeds. “And support failing knees,” as you have failed through your wicked deeds. “Say to the impetuous [lenimharei] of heart” (Isaiah 35:4), Rabbi Hoshaya Rabba said: To the brokenhearted, as it is stated: “They will destroy [yemaharu] its wall” (Nahum 2:6). Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi said: Like those who seek to hasten the end,32The end of the exile, the salvation. as it is stated: “She hastened [vatemaher] and lowered her jug” (Genesis 24:18).

“Be strong, do not fear” (Isaiah 35:4) – Because Israel was saying: “My tears have been my bread day and night, when they say to me all day long: Where is your God?” (Psalms 42:4), a Divine Voice emerged and said to them: “Behold, your God will come with vengeance” (Isaiah 35:4). The One who is destined to give the nations of the world their just deserts, “the retribution of God, He will come and save you” (Isaiah 35:4).

“For many days, Israel” (II Chronicles 15:3) – were they, in fact, many days? Rather, because they were days of suffering, he characterized them as many. Similarly, “Many days passed and the word of the Lord was with Elijah, in the third year, saying” (I Kings 18:1) – Rabbi Berekhya and Rabbi Ḥelbo in the name of Rabbi Yoḥanan: Three months in the first [year], three months in the last, and twelve months in the middle; that is eighteen months.

Were they, in fact, many days? Rather, they were days of suffering; therefore, he characterized them as many. Similarly, “It was during those many days” (Exodus 2:23); were they, in fact, many days? Rather, it is because they were days of suffering.

Similarly, “many days, one hundred and eighty days” (Esther 1:4); were they, in fact, many days? Rather, it is because they were… And this verse, “And a woman, if her bloody discharge will flow many days…” – Rabbi Ḥiyya taught: “Days,” two; “many,” three.33Thus, although the verse refers to only three days, the phrase “many days” is used because they are days of suffering. From then on, she is not a menstruant, but rather, afflicted.34Some suggest that this sentence is based on the continuation of the verse: “not at the time of her menstruation.”

If a woman experiences bleeding during the time of her menstruation she has one set of laws (those of a nidda); if she experiences bleeding more than seven days but less than eighteen days after the onset of her last menstrual cycle, she has a different set of laws (those of a zava) (Midrash Rabba HaMevoar). “The menstruant in her menstruation” is not written here, but rather, “one who is afflicted [hadava] in her menstruation” (Leviticus 15:33).35The word dava is Aramaic for zava (Matnot Kehuna).

Rabbi Simlai said: The Holy One blessed be He inflicted great suffering on this woman, who, after she observes the day of discharge, sits and observes seven days of menstruation.36By Torah law, a woman who experiences menstrual bleeding (a nidda) is impure for seven days. A woman who experiences bleeding on three consecutive days when it is not the time for her menstrual period (a zava) must observe seven clean days before she can become pure, parallel to the entire time in which a nidda is impure.

The Torah calls her a menstruant [nidda]; “one who is afflicted in her discharge” is not written here, but rather, “one who is afflicted in her menstruation.” Rabbi Yoḥanan says in the name of Rabbi Eliezer son of Rabbi Yosei HaGelili: If this woman, because she withdraws for two or three days, the Torah calls her nidda,37This is a term with connotations of ostracism. we, who have withdrawn from the House of our sanctity and our glory38The Temple. for numerous days and numerous years, numerous epochs and numerous eras, all the more so.

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Another matter, “and a woman, if her bloody discharge will flow.” Who fulfilled the mitzva of [separating from a woman at the time of her] discharge? It was Yekhonyahu son of Yehoyakim. They say that when Nebuchadnezzar ascended to destroy Jerusalem, he ascended and encamped at Daphne at Antioch, and the Great Sanhedrin descended to greet him.

They said to him: ‘Has the time arrived for this house to be destroyed?’ He said to them: ‘No. But Yehoyakim rebelled against me. Give him to me and I will go.’ They came to Yehoyakim and said to him: ‘Nebuchadnezzar wants you.’

He said to them: ‘Is this how one acts? Does one disregard one life in favor of another life? Do [you] disregard my life in order to sustain your lives? It is written: “You shall not deliver a slave to his master”’ (Deuteronomy 23:16).

They said to him: ‘Did your ancestor not do so to Sheva ben Bikhri?’39See II Samuel Chapter 20. Since he did not heed them, they rose, took him, and lowered him to [Nebuchadnezzar]. How did they lower him? Rabbi Eliezer and Rabbi Shimon, Rabbi Eliezer ben Rabbi Natan said: They lowered him alive, just as it says: “They placed him in a cage with hooks [baḥaḥim]” (Ezekiel 19:9); “alive [baḥayim]” is written.40The word as written in this verse is baḥaḥim.

Some suggest that the midrash derives the connection between “with hooks [baḥaḥim]” and “alive [baḥayim]” from the fact that in Ezekiel 29:4 the word hooks [ḥaḥim] is written with two yods, such that it could be read ḥaḥayim (HaTirosh). Rabbi Shimon said: They lowered him to him dead, just as it says: “So that his voice would be heard no longer” (Ezekiel 19:9). Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi said: I will uphold the statement of both of them.

They lowered him alive, but he was delicate and he died at their hands. What did Nebuchadnezzar do to him? Rabbi Yehuda and Rabbi Neḥemya, Rabbi Yehuda says: He took him and brought him around to all the cities of Judah, and he sat and judged him in a show trial and executed him. He tore open a donkey and placed him in it.

That is what is written: “He will be buried in the burial of a donkey” (Jeremiah 22:19). Rabbi Neḥemya said: He took him and brought him to all the cities of Israel and executed him. He would cut from him [pieces of flesh the size of] olive bulks and cast them to the dogs. That is what is written: “He will be buried in the burial of a donkey.”

Where is a donkey buried, is it not in the innards of a dog? It is he whom the prophet castigates and says: “The rest of the matters of Yehoyakim, and everything that he did” (II Kings 24:5).41Some suggest that the reference should be to the following verse: “The rest of the deeds of Yehoyakim, and his abominations that he performed, and that which was found about him, behold, they are written in the book of the kings of Israel and Judah” (II Chronicles 36:8) (Rashash).

Rabbi Yoḥanan said: There were three amora’im;42Three amora’im offered interpretations as to the actions he performed that are alluded to in the phrase “and that which was found about him” – see previous footnote. one said that he wore diverse kinds, one said that he pulled his foreskin,43He attempted to conceal that he was circumcised. one said that he had a tattoo engraved on his flesh. Rabbi Yoḥanan said: It is that he consorted with his mother, his daughter-in-law, and his father’s wife, as Rabbi Yoḥanan said: The truth of the matter is that he entered the entrance through which he had emerged.

Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi said: It is that he settled biraniyot in Jerusalem. What are biraniyot? Empty [bairan] and bound [tzairan], as he would kill the husbands, ravage the wives, and place their money in the royal treasury. That is what is written: “He ravished its widows” (Ezekiel 19:7).

Once Nebuchadnezzar killed him, he crowned his son, Yekhonya, in his stead and descended to Babylon. All the citizens of Babylon emerged to laud him. They said to him: ‘What did you do?’ He said to them: ‘Yehoyakim rebelled against me.

I killed him and crowned his son Yekhonya in his stead.’ They said to him: ‘The parable says: Do not raise a good puppy from a bad dog, and a bad puppy from a bad dog, all the more so.’ Immediately, he heeded them and ascended and encamped at Daphne at Antioch. The Great Sanhedrin descended to greet him.

They said to him: ‘Has the time arrived for this house to be destroyed?’ He said to them: ‘No. However, the one whom I crowned, give him to me and I will go on my way.’ They went and said to Yekhonya: ‘Nebuchadnezzar wants you.’ What did he do?

He stood and collected all the keys to the Temple and ascended to the rooftop. He said: ‘Master of the universe, since we did not merit to be treasurers before You; until now we have been faithful custodians before You, from here on, here are Your keys before You.’ Two amora’im; one said,a sort of fiery hand descended and took them from him, and one said, from the moment that he threw them, they did not descend again.

What were the youths of Israel doing? They were ascending to their rooftops and falling and dying. That is what is written: “A prophecy of the Valley of Vision: What, indeed, is with you, that you all went up to the roofs?” (Isaiah 22:1). What did Nebuchadnezzar do?

He took him and incarcerated him in prison. Anyone who was incarcerated in his days would never emerge from there, based on: “Who never released his prisoners homeward” (Isaiah 14:17). Yehoyakhin44Yehoyakhin, Yekhonya, and Konya are all varieties of the same name and refer to the same individual. was exiled and the Great Sanhedrin was exiled with him. That is what is written: “Is [this man Konya] a despised, shattered idol [ha’etzev]?” (Jeremiah 22:28).

Rabbi Abba bar Kahana said: Like this bone [ka’etzem] with marrow, that once you shatter it, it is not good for anything…until “She’altiel” (I Chronicles 3:17). The Holy One blessed be He consulted [shaal] with His supernal court and they annulled His oath.45See Vayikra Rabba 10:5. At that moment, the Great Sanhedrin convened to deliberate and said: In our day, the kingdom of the House of David will cease, in whose regard it is written: “His throne will be as the sun before Me” (Psalms 89:37).

What shall we do? Let us go and appease Gadelet,46Gadelet was the nursemaid of Nebuchadnezzar’s queen’s nursemaid. and Gadelet [will appease] the queen, and the queen [will appease] the king. They went and appeased Gadelet, and Gadelet, the queen, and the queen, the king. What was the name of Nebuchadnezzar’s wife?

Rav Huna said: Her name was Shemiram. Rabbi Avin said: Her name was Shemiramot. The Rabbis say: Her name was Shemiraam, because she was born in thunder. When Nebuchadnezzar came to consort with her, she said to him: ‘You are a king; is Yekhonya not a king?

You seek your position; does Yekhonya not seek his position?’47Yekhonya, as a king, deserves to be treated with some degree of respect, even in prison. In particular, he should be granted his position, meaning conjugal rights. Immediately he issued a decree and they gave him his wife. How did they lower her to him?

Rabbi Shabetai said: They lowered her to him through the skylights. The Rabbis say: They opened the roof and lowered her to him. When he came to consort with her, she said to him: ‘I saw [blood] like a red rose.’48She experienced menstrual bleeding. He withdrew from her.

Immediately, she went, counted, became purified, and immersed. The Holy One blessed be He said to him: ‘In Jerusalem you did not fulfill the mitzva of discharge, but now you are fulfilling it, as it is stated: “You too, for the blood of your covenant, I have released your prisoners from the pit” (Zechariah 9:11). You remembered that blood of Sinai;49The blood of the covenant (see Exodus 24:8). therefore, “I have released your prisoners.”’50Yehoyakhin was eventually released (see II Kings 25:27–28).

Rabbi Shabetai said: He did not move from there until the Holy One blessed be He granted him atonement for him of all his iniquities. Regarding that moment it says: “All of you is fair, my love, and there is no blemish in you” (Song of Songs 4:7). A Divine Voice emerged and said to them: “Return, wayward children, I will heal your deviances” (Jeremiah 3:22).

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“The Lord spoke to Moses after the death of the two sons of Aaron, when they approached before the Lord, and they died” (Leviticus 16:1). “After the death of the two sons of Aaron.” Rabbi Shimon began: “Everything is as it is for everyone. There is one fate for the righteous and for the wicked” (Ecclesiastes 9:2).

“For the righteous,” this is Noah, in whose regard it is stated: “A righteous man” (Genesis 6:9). Rabbi Yoḥanan said in the name of Rabbi Eliezer son of Rabbi Yosei HaGelili: When Noah emerged from the ark, a lion bit him and maimed him, and he was unfit to offer sacrifices, and Shem, his son, offered in his stead. “And for the wicked,” this is Pharaoh Nekho. When he sought to sit on Solomon’s throne, he did not know its protocols; a lion bit him and maimed him.

This one died limping, and that one died limping. That is what is written: “There is one fate for the righteous and for the wicked.” “For the good, for the pure, and for the impure” (Ecclesiastes 9:2). “For the good,” this is Moses, as it is stated: “She saw him, that he was good” (Exodus 2:2).

Rabbi Meir said: That he was born circumcised. “For the pure,” this is Aaron, who was engaged in the purification of Israel, as it is stated: “He walked with Me in peace and uprightness and he returned many from iniquity” (Malachi 2:6). “For the impure,” these are the scouts. These1Moses and Aaron. spoke in praise of the Land of Israel and these2The scouts. spoke in its denigration.

These did not enter and these did not enter. That is what is written: “For the good, for the pure and for the impure.” “For the one who sacrifices” (Ecclesiastes 9:2), this is Josiah, as it is stated: “Josiah donated to the members of the people from the flocks, lambs and goats” (II Chronicles 35:7). “And for the one who does not sacrifice” (Ecclesiastes 9:2), this is Ahab, who abolished offerings.

That is what is written: “Ahab slaughtered for himself sheep and cattle in abundance” (II Chronicles 18:2). He slaughtered for himself, but not for offerings. This one died with arrows and that one died with arrows. That is what is written: “For the one who sacrifices and for the one who does not sacrifice.”

“Like the good [katov], so is the sinner” (Ecclesiastes 9:2); “like the good,” this is David, as it is stated: “He sent and brought him. He was…of fine [tov] appearance” (I Samuel 16:12). Rabbi Yitzḥak said: “Of fine appearance,” regarding halakha. Anyone who saw him would remember his studies.

“So is the sinner,” this is Nebuchadnezzar, as it is stated: “Redeem your sins with charity” (Daniel 4:24).3This verse was stated to Nebuchadnezzar, indicating that he was a sinner and therefore needed to redeem his sins. This one built the Temple and reigned forty years, and that one destroyed the Temple and reigned forty years. That is, “there is one fate…” “One who takes an oath” (Ecclesiastes 9:2), this is Zedekiah, as it is stated: “He rebelled against King Nebuchadnezzar, too” (II Chronicles 36:13).

“Like one who fears an oath” (Ecclesiastes 9:2), this is Samson, as it is stated: “Samson said to them: Take an oath to me that you will not smite me” (Judges 15:12). This one died with his eyes gouged, “and he blinded the eyes of Zedekiah” (II Kings 25:7); and that one died with his eyes gouged, “the Philistines seized him, and they gouged his eyes” (Judges 16:21). That is what is written: “There is one fate…for the one who takes an oath…” Another matter, “there is one fate,” these are the sons of Aaron, in whose regard it is written: “In peace and uprightness” (Malachi 2:6).

“For the wicked,” this is the assembly of Koraḥ, in whose regard it is written: “Move, now [from the tents of these wicked men]” (Numbers 16:26). These entered to sacrifice in dispute and emerged burned, and these entered to sacrifice without dispute, and emerged burned.

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Another matter, “after the death [of the two sons of Aaron]” (Leviticus 16:1). Rabbi Levi began: “I said to the revelers [laholelim]: Do not revel” (Psalms 75:5); laholelim, to the confused,4The word laholelim is being interpreted to mean mixed up, as in the verse “mixed [mahul] in water” (Isaiah 1:22) (Etz Yosef). those whose hearts are filled with wicked thoughts. Rabbi Levi would call them woe-generators, because they bring woe to the world.

“And to the wicked, do not raise your horn” (Psalms 75:5). The Holy One blessed be He said to the wicked: ‘The righteous did not rejoice in My world, and you seek to rejoice?’ Reish Lakish said in the name of Rabbi Shimon ben Menasya: The ball of the heel of Adam the first man would outshine the sun, all the more so the radiance of his face.5Nonetheless, despite his greatness, Adam did not rejoice, as he sinned almost immediately after his creation.

Similarly, no man should rejoice (Maharzu, based on Tanḥuma, Aḥarei, 2). Do not wonder, as the way of the world is that if a person crafts bowls, one for himself and one for a member of his household, whose does he craft more beautifully? Is it not his? So too, Adam the first man was created for the service of the Holy One blessed be He, and the sun was created for the service of the creations.

Rabbi Levi said in the name of Rabbi Ḥama bar Ḥanina: The Holy One blessed be He tied thirteen canopies for him in the Garden of Eden, as it is stated: “You were in Eden, the garden of God; every precious stone was your canopy: ruby, topaz and clear quartz, beryl, onyx and chalcedony, sapphire, carbuncle, emerald and gold; the craftsmanship of your settings and your sockets was in you, on the day of your creation they were prepared” (Ezekiel 28:13).

Rabbi Shimon ben Lakish said there were eleven [canopies] and the Rabbis said there were ten. But they do not disagree.6They do not disagree about the fact that the number of canopies is derived from the aforementioned verse in Ezekiel. The one who considers them thirteen considers “every precious stone was your canopy” as three.7He understands that the words every, precious, and stone allude to an additional three canopies, in addition to the ten types of precious stone listed explicitly in the verse, which each refer to a canopy crafted from that stone.

Alternatively, he understands that the term “every” itself indicates three (see Maharzu). The one who considers them eleven considers it as one.8The phrase “every precious stone was your canopy” alludes to one additional canopy. The one who considers them ten does not consider it as one. After all this praise, “for you are dust and to dust you will return” (Genesis 3:19).9Despite the great glory accorded Adam, God informs him that he is created from dust and will die and return to dust. [God said to the wicked:] ‘Abraham did not rejoice in My world and you seek to rejoice?’

A son was born to him at the age of one hundred, and ultimately, the Holy One blessed be He said to him: “Take now your son…[and offer him up there for a burnt offering upon one of the mountains that I will tell you]” (Genesis 22:2). Abraham went on a three-day journey. After three days, he saw a cloud fixed on the mountaintop. He said to [Isaac]: ‘My son, do you see what I see?’ [Isaac] said to him: ‘Yes.’ ‘What do you see?’

He said to him: ‘I see a cloud fixed on the mountaintop.’ He said to Ishmael and to Eliezer: ‘Do you see anything?’ They said to him: ‘No.’ He said to them: ‘Since you do not see anything, and this donkey does not see, “stay here with the donkey [im haḥamor]”’ (Genesis 22:5), [indicating they were] peoples comparable to the donkey [am hadomim laḥamor]. He took Isaac his son, took him up mountains and took him down hills.

He took him up on one of the mountains, built an altar, arranged the wood, set the arrangement, and took the knife to slaughter him. Had it not been that an angel called him from the heavens, he would have already been slaughtered. Know that it is so, as Isaac returned to his mother and she said to him: ‘Where have you been, my son?’ He said to her: ‘My father took me, took me up mountains, took me down hills…’ She said: ‘Woe unto the son of that woman full of grief, had it not been for the angel you would have already been slaughtered.’

He said to her: ‘Yes.’ At that moment she cried out six cries, corresponding to six shofar blasts.10By Torah law, the mitzva of shofar on Rosh Hashana requires three broken blasts (terua), each preceded and followed by a straight blast (tekia), for a total of nine blasts. The six straight blasts required correspond to Sarah’s six cries (Etz Yosef). They say that she did not complete them before she died.

That is what is written: “Abraham came to lament Sarah and to weep over her” (Genesis 23:2). From where did he come? He came from Mount Moriah. Abraham had been ruminating in his heart, saying that perhaps, God forbid, some disqualification was found in [Isaac] and [therefore] his offering was not accepted.

A Divine voice emerged and said to him: “Go, eat your bread with joy” (Ecclesiastes 9:7). ‘Israel did not rejoice in My world.’ It does not say “Israel rejoiced in its Maker,” but rather: “Israel will rejoice in its Maker” (Psalms 149:2). They are destined to rejoice in the deeds of the Holy One blessed be He in the future. As it were, the Holy One blessed be He did not rejoice in His world.

It does not say: “The Lord rejoiced in His works,” but rather: “will rejoice” (Psalms 104:31). The Holy One blessed be He is destined to rejoice in the actions of the righteous in the future. Elisheva bat Aminadav did not rejoice in the world when she saw five crowns [attained by her relatives] on one day. Her brother-in-law11Moses. was king, her brother,12Naḥshon. a prince, her husband,13Aaron.

High Priest, her two sons,14Nadav and Avihu. the two deputy priests, her grandson Pinḥas anointed for war. When her sons entered to sacrifice and were burned, her joy was transformed into mourning. That is what is written: “After the death of the two sons of Aaron.”

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Rabbi Abba bar Kahana began: “Of laughter, I said it is confounded, [and of joy, what does it accomplish?]” (Ecclesiastes 2:2). If this laughter is confounded,15If the laughter is mixed with mourning, of what use is it? The term meholal, translated here as confounded, is understood in the sense of mixed, as above, based on Isaiah 1:22 (Etz Yosef). of what use is joy? There was an incident involving one of the prominent leaders of Kavul, who was marrying off his son.

On his Wednesday,16Weddings were performed on Wednesdays (see Mishna Ketubot 1:1). he invited guests to join him. Once they ate, drank, and made their hearts merry, he said to his son: ‘Ascend and bring us a barrel [of wine] from the attic.’ When he ascended, he was bitten by a snake and he died. [The father] waited for him to descend, but he did not descend. He said: ‘I will ascend and see what the status of my son is.’

He ascended and found that a snake bit him and he died, and he was cast between the barrels. He waited until they finished their feast. He said to them: ‘My masters, did you not come to recite the blessing of the bridegrooms for my son? Recite over him the blessing of the mourners.

Did you not come to bring my son into his wedding canopy? Come and bring him into his grave.’ Rabbi Zakkai of Kavul concluded: “Of laughter, I said it is confounded.”

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Rabbi Yudan of Gaul began: “Does the eagle ascend at your directive?” (Job 39:27). The Holy One blessed be He said to Aaron: ‘Did I rest My Divine Presence upon the Ark by the word of your mouth, or did I remove My Divine Presence from upon the Ark by the word of your mouth?’17The verse the midrash is commenting upon is one in which God speaks to Job, and therefore some emend the text such that it reads: The Holy One blessed be He said to Job: Did I rest My Divine Presence upon the Ark by the word of your mouth, or did I remove My Divine Presence from upon the Ark by the word of your mouth, as I did by the word of the mouth of Aaron? (see Etz Yosef). “[On a rock it dwells and stays the night, on the crag of the rock and the stronghold” (Job 39:28).]

“On a rock it dwells” – the first Temple; “and stays the night” – one lodging. The second Temple is “on the crag of the rock and the stronghold,” – many lodgings,18Just as one would lodge more permanently in a stronghold than on a rock, the second Temple lasted longer than the first (Rabbi David Luria). as we learned there: When the Ark was removed, the foundation stone was there.19Thus, the word rock alludes to the Temple.

Why was it called that? Rabbi Yosei ben Ḥalafta said: It is because from it, the world was founded. That is what is written: “From Zion, from the perfection of beauty” (Psalms 50:2).20The Talmud (Yoma 54b), in citing this verse, adds: From it was formed the beauty of the earth. What was the prayer of the High Priest on Yom Kippur when he emerged from the Inner Sanctum?21After emerging from the Holy of Holies, while still in the Sanctuary, the High Priest would say a prayer on behalf of the entire nation (Mishna Yoma 5:1).

He said: ‘May it be Your will that this year will be rainy, hot, and dewy. A year of goodwill, a year of blessing, a year of inexpensiveness, a year of plenty, a year of commerce, and may Your people Israel not need one another. May Israel not exert authority upon one another. Do not turn to the prayers of the wayfarers.’22Travelers would not want rain to fall while they were traveling.

However, if God were to grant the requests of each traveler in this regard, rain would never fall, which would have terrible consequences for all. The Rabbis of Caesarea said, regarding our brethren in Caesarea: ‘May they not exert authority.’ The Rabbis of the south said, regarding our brethren in the Sharon region: ‘May their houses not become their graves.’ “From there it searches for food” (Job 39:29); from there he would search for food to take for all the days of the year.23The High Priest would hope that through his prayer in the Holy of Holies on Yom Kippur, there would be plentiful sustenance for the entire year.

“Its eyes look afar” (Job 39:29); from the beginning of the year, he would know what would be at its end. How so? When he would look and see the smoke of the arrangement ascending to the south, he would know that the south would be satiated; ascending to the west, he would know that the west would be satiated; ascending to the east, he would know that the east would be satiated; and the same is true of them all.

If it ascended to the center of the heavens, he would know that the entire world would be satiated. After all this praise, “its fledglings swallow blood” (Job 39:30) – he saw his fledglings wallowing on the ground and was silent.24After all the greatness Aaron merited; the fact that God rested His Presence on the Ark through him, and the fact that his descendants would perform the service in the Holy of Holies on Yom Kippur and thereby bring sustenance to the entire people, Aaron saw his sons, Nadav and Avihu, die in the Tabernacle, and he was silent (see Leviticus 10:3).

“Where the slain are” (Job 39:30), Nadav and Avihu; “there it is” (Job 39:30), the Divine Presence. Rabbi Yudan in the name of Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi and Rabbi Berekhya in the name of Rabbi Ḥiyya bar Abba said: “Approach, carry your brethren from before the Sanctuary” (Leviticus 10:4); it does not say: “From before the Ark,” but rather “from before the Sanctuary,” like a person who says to another: ‘Move this corpse from before this mourner, how long must this mourner suffer?’ That is what is written: “After the death of the two sons of Aaron.”

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Rabbi Aḥa and Rabbi Ze’eira began: “Even at this my heart trembles veyitar from its place” (Job 37:1). What is veyitar? It is “and leaps,” just as it says: “To leap [lenater] with them from upon the earth” (Leviticus 11:21). The Holy One blessed be He said: ‘Will Aaron’s sons not be like his staff, that entered dry and emerged moist?’25See Numbers 17:16-24. The wicked Titus entered the chamber of the Holy of Holies with his sword drawn in his hand, stabbed the curtain, and his sword emerged full of blood. He entered in peace and emerged in peace. Aaron’s sons entered to sacrifice and emerged burned. That is what is written: “After the death of the two sons of Aaron, [when they approached before the Lord and they died].”

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Rabbi Berekhya began: “To punish also the righteous is not good” (Proverbs 17:26). The Holy One blessed be He said: ‘Even though I punished Aaron and took his two sons from him, it “is not good.”’ However, “to strike the noble for their uprightness” (Proverbs 17:26);26Sometimes it is necessary to strike the righteous in order to influence the masses toward uprightness. that is what is written: “After the death.”27God speaks after the death of Nadav and Avihu, Aaron’s sons, and tells Aaron not to enter the Holy of Holies at all times and without the proper sacrificial service.

The context of this command indicates that the death of his sons serves to motivate Aaron and other priests to observe these laws carefully and to maintain a perspective of awe toward the Temple. Rabbi Eliezer taught: Aaron’s sons died only because they issued halakhic rulings before Moses their teacher. There was an incident involving a certain disciple who issued a halakhic ruling before his teacher, Rabbi Eliezer.

He said to Ima Shalom:28Rabbi Eliezer said to his wife, Ima Shalom, regarding his disciple. ‘Woe to this one’s wife; he will not complete this week.’ His week did not end before he died. The Sages came to him and they said to him: ‘Are you a prophet?’ He said to them: ‘“I am neither a prophet nor the son of a prophet” (Amos 7:14), but this is a tradition I received; anyone who issues a halakhic ruling before his teacher is liable to be put to death.’

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Rabbi Eliezer taught: It is prohibited for a disciple to issue halakhic rulings before his teacher until he is at a distance of twelve mil from him, corresponding to the camp of Israel. That is what is written: “They encamped along the Jordan, [from Beit Yeshimot until Avel Shitim]” (Numbers 33:49). How much is that? It is twelve mil.

Rabbi Tanḥum ben Rabbi Yirmeya was in Ḥefer. They would ask him and he would issue halakhic rulings. They said to him: ‘Did you not teach us in the study hall that it is prohibited for a disciple to issue halakhic rulings before his teacher until twelve mil, and is your teacher, Rabbi Manei, not in Tzippori?’ He said to them: ‘May [punishment] come upon me if I knew.’29He swore to them that he did not know his teacher was within twelve mil. From that time he did not issue halakhic rulings.

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Bar Kappara said in the name of Rabbi Yirmeya ben Elazar: Due to four matters Aaron’s sons died: For drawing near; for sacrificing; for alien fire; and because they did not take counsel from one another. For drawing near, because they entered the innermost sanctum; for sacrificing, because they sacrificed an offering regarding which they were not commanded; for alien fire, they brought in fire from a stove; and because they did not take counsel from one another, as it is stated: “Each took his fire pan” (Leviticus 10:1), each on his own, as they did not take counsel from one another.

Rabbi Yirmeya ben Elazar said: In four places,30Leviticus 10:1, 16:1; Numbers 3:4, 26:61. it mentions the death of Aaron’s sons, and in all of them it mentions their sin. Why to that extent? It is to inform you that they had committed only this sin alone. Rabbi Elazar HaModa’i said: Come and see how difficult the death of Aaron’s sons was before the Holy One blessed be He, as every place that it mentions their death it mentions their sin.

Why to that extent? It is to inform you [of their sin], so that all who enter the world will not have pretext to say: ‘They had clandestinely committed corrupt actions and that was the reason they died.’

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Rabbi Manei of She’av, Rabbi Yehoshua of Sikhnin, and Rabbi Yoḥanan in the name of Rabbi Levi said: Due to four matters Aaron’s sons died, and death is written regarding all of them. Because they were intoxicated with wine, and death is written in its regard, as it is stated: “You shall not drink wine or intoxicating drink, [you, nor your sons with you, upon your entry into the Tent of Meeting, that you not die]” (Leviticus 10:9).

Because they were lacking vestments, and death is written in its regard, as it is stated: “They shall be on Aaron and his sons [whenever they enter the Tent of Meeting…so they will not bear iniquity and die]” (Exodus 28:43). What were they lacking? It was the robe, in whose regard death is written, as it is stated: “It shall be on Aaron to serve…[and he will not die]” (Exodus 28:35). Because they entered without washing hands and feet, as it is stated: “They shall wash their hands and their feet, and they will not die” (Exodus 30:21), and it is written: “When they come to the Tent of Meeting they shall wash in water” (Exodus 30:20).

And because they did not have children, and death is written in its regard; that is what is written: “Nadav and Avihu died before the Lord…and they had no children” (Numbers 3:4). Abba Ḥanin says: It is because they did not have wives, as it is written: “And atone for himself and for his household” (Leviticus 16:6); “his household,” this is his wife.

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Rabbi Levi said: They were arrogant. Many women were sitting unmarried, waiting for them. What would they say? ‘Our father’s brother is king, our mother’s brother is a prince, our father is the High Priest, and we are the two deputy priests; what woman is worthy of us?’ Rabbi Menaḥama said in the name of Rabbi Yehoshua ben Neḥemya: “Fire devoured His young men, [and His virgins had no wedding celebration]” (Psalms 78:63).

Why did fire devour His young men? Because “His virgins had no wedding celebration.” Moreover, from this: “To Moses, He said: Ascend to the Lord, [you and Aaron, Nadav and Avihu]” (Exodus 24:1).31This is another indication of their haughtiness. The verse does not separate Moses and Aaron from Nadav and Avihu by a conjunction, presenting them all as though they are all on the same plane.

This reflects the manner in which Nadav and Avihu viewed themselves, as is being presently explained by the midrash (Etz Yosef). This teaches that Moses and Aaron were walking ahead, Nadav and Avihu were walking behind them, and all of Israel behind them. They were saying: ‘When will these two old men die, and we will assert authority over the public?’ Rabbi Yudan said in the name of Rabbi Aivu: They said it to one another with their mouths.

Rabbi Pinḥas said: They contemplated it in their hearts. Rabbi Berekhya said: The Holy One blessed be He said to them: ‘“Do not glory in tomorrow” (Proverbs 27:1). Many young donkeys have died and their hides have been spread over their mothers.’32Their hides have been turned into saddle packs and placed on their mothers. The point is that sometimes children die while their parents are still alive and active.

Moreover, from this: “Against the noble of the children of Israel, He did not extend His hand” (Exodus 24:11). Rabbi Pinḥas said: From here [it may be derived] that they were deserving of the hand being extended, as Rabbi Hoshaya said: Did cakes go up with them to Sinai, that it states: “They beheld God [and ate and drank]”? (Exodus 24:11). Rather, it teaches that they feasted their eyes on the Divine Presence.

“They beheld God” like a person who looks at another while eating and drinking. Rabbi Yoḥanan said: Actual nourishment, just as it says: “Life is in the light of the king’s countenance” (Proverbs 16:15).33Rabbi Yehoshua is saying that the verse refers to the noble of the children of Israel. i.e. Nadav and Avihu as eating and drinking as they beheld God, in order to indicate that they beheld God without the proper fear and seriousness.

Rabbi Yoḥanan argues that they actually received nourishment from looking at God. Both agree, however, that they beheld God in an improper manner. Rabbi Tanḥuma says: It teaches that they exposed their heads, acted with arrogance, and feasted their eyes on the Divine Presence. Rabbi Yehoshua of Sikhnin said in the name of Rabbi Levi: Moses did not feast his eyes on the Divine Presence and benefited from the Divine Presence.

He did not feast his eyes on the Divine Presence, as it is stated: “Moses concealed his face [because he feared to look at God]” (Exodus 3:6). And from where is it derived that he benefited from the Divine Presence? “Moses did not know that his face was radiant” (Exodus 34:29). In reward for “[Moses] concealed,” he was privileged in: “The Lord spoke to Moses face to face” (Exodus 33:11).

In reward for “because he feared” (Exodus 3:6), he was privileged in: “They feared to approach him” (Exodus 34:30). In reward for “[feared] to look [mehabit]” (Exodus 3:6), he was privileged to: “And beholds [yabit] the image of the Lord” (Numbers 12:8). Nadav and Avihu feasted their eyes on the Divine Presence and received no benefit from it. Moreover, from this: “Nadav and Avihu died before the Lord [when they presented strange fire before the Lord in the wilderness of Sinai, and they had no children; Elazar and Itamar served as priests in the presence of Aaron, their father]” (Numbers 3:4).

Did they, in fact, die before the Lord?34The midrash here adopts the view that Nadav and Avihu did not die in the Tabernacle itself, but in the courtyard of the Tabernacle (see Sifra, Shemini, Mekhilta deMiluim 35). Rather, it teaches that it is difficult before the Holy One blessed be He when the children of the righteous die during their lifetimes. Rabbi Yudan of Yafo raised a question before Rabbi Pinḥas bar Rabbi Ḥama in the name of Rabbi Simon.

Here it says: “Before the Lord” (Leviticus 10:2), “before the Lord” (Numbers 3:4) – twice. But there, it says: “Before Aaron, their father” (I Chronicles 24:2) – once. This teaches that it was difficult before the Holy One blessed be He, twice as much as for their father. “In the wilderness of Sinai” (Numbers 3:4), Rabbi Meir said: Did they, in fact, die in the wilderness of Sinai?35They did die in the wilderness, but the verse should have been more specific and mentioned that they died in the Tent of Meeting.

Rather, it teaches that they took their death sentence from Mount Sinai.36At the giving of the Torah on Mount Sinai, Nadav and Avihu gazed at God and became liable for the death penalty. This is analogous to a king who was marrying off his daughter and found in one of the members of the wedding party a matter of infamy. The king said: ‘If I kill him now, I will compromise my daughter’s celebration.

Tomorrow, my celebration will come. It is preferable during my celebration and not during my daughter’s celebration.’ So too, the Holy One blessed be He said: ‘If I kill them now, I will compromise the celebration of My daughter. Tomorrow, My celebration will come.’

His daughter, this is the Torah. That is what is written: “On the day of his wedding and on the day of the rejoicing of his heart” (Song of Songs 3:11). “On the day of his wedding,” this is Mount Sinai, “and on the day of the rejoicing of his heart,” this is the Tent of Meeting.37Instead of killing Nadav and Avihu at the time of the giving of the Torah, God waited until the celebration of the inauguration of the Tabernacle.

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“They had no children” (Numbers 3:4). Rabbi Yaakov bar Avin said in the name of Rabbi Avin in the name of Rav Aḥa: If they had sons, they would have taken precedence over Elazar and Itamar, as we learned elsewhere: Anyone who takes precedence for inheritance takes precedence for honor, provided that he conducts himself in the manner of his ancestors. “Elazar and Itamar served as priests in the presence of Aaron, their father” (Numbers 3:4).

Rabbi Yitzḥak said: During his lifetime. Rabbi Ḥiyya bar Abba said: Upon his death. According to the opinion of Rabbi Ḥiyya bar Abba, who said, upon his death, here it is written: “The presence of [penei],” and there it says: “Abraham arose from the presence of [penei] his dead” (Genesis 23:3); just as there it was upon her death, here, too it was upon his death. According to Rabbi Yitzḥak, who said, during his lifetime, here it is stated: “In the presence of [al penei],” and there it is stated: “Ḥaran died in the presence of [al penei] Teraḥ his father” (Genesis 11:28); just as there it was during his lifetime, so, too, here, it was during his lifetime.

If impurity befell Aaron, Elazar served. If it befell Elazar, Itamar served. There was an incident involving Shimon ben Kimḥit,38A High Priest who served during the Second Temple. who went to speak with the Arab king. Spittle sprayed from [the king’s] mouth onto [Shimon’s] garments and impurified him, and Yehuda, his brother, entered and served in the high priesthood in his stead.

That day, their mother saw her two sons as High Priests. They said: Kimḥit had seven sons and all of them served in the high priesthood. They sent to her and said to her: ‘What good deeds do you have to your credit?’ She said to them: ‘The beams of my house have never seen the hair of my head and the hem of my robe.’

They said: ‘All the flours are flour, but the flour of Kimḥit is fine flour.’ They read in her regard: “All the glory of the princess is within” (Psalms 45:14).39This is understood to express that modesty brings a woman great honor. According to Rabbi Ḥiyya bar Abba, who said, upon his death, when Aaron died, Elazar served. When Elazar died, Itamar served.