Quotation על פסחים 10:10
Jerusalem Talmud Pesachim
MISHNAH: One mixes him the second cup, and here the son asks62He is supposed spontaneously to ask why this dinner is different from the usual set-up.. If the son does not know how to ask, his father instructs him63The following catalogue is an example of the questions with which the instruction may start. The order of the questions is the same in Maimonides’s text, different in the Babli.: What is the difference between this night and all other nights? For every night we dip once64As explained in Note 52., but this night we dip twice. For every night we eat leavened and unleavened bread, but this night only unleavened. For in all other nights we eat meat roasted, preserved65By extended cooking. This always is mentioned as a separate category of preparation of food., or cooked, but in this night only roasted. According to the son’s understanding the father teaches him66Along the lines explained in Mishnah 5. If children or women do not understand Hebrew, this implies the duty to translate the Haggadah text.. He starts with ignominy67As explained in Halakhah 5. and ends with praise and explains from “a lost Aramean was my father” until he finishes the paragraph68Deut. 26:5–8. The Babli text, “until he finishes the paragraph completely”, would instruct to include also v. 9, not included in the Haggadah text identical with Sifry Deut. on Deut. 26:5–8..
Rabban Gamliel used to say, anybody who did not teach these three words on Passover did not fulfill his duty, Pesaḥ, mazzah, and bitter herbs. Pesaḥ because the Omnipresent passed over the houses of our forefathers in Egypt, mazzah because our forefathers were freed from Egypt81A reference to Ex. 12:39 is understood, but is not included in any reliable Mishnah ms.. Bitter herbs because the Egyptians embittered the lives of our forefathers in Egypt. In every generation a person is required to see himself as if he himself had gone out of Egypt, as it was said, you shall tell your son on that day, this is on account of what the Eternal did for me when I left Egypt. Therefore we are required to thank, sing His praise, laud, glorify, exalt, praise in perpetuity, to glorify, Him who did all these miracles for us82Since everybody has to consider himself as if he left Egypt, it is appropriate that here “our forefathers” are not mentioned, in contrast to the Mishnah in the Babli. and led us from slavery to freedom; let us say before Him Hallelujah83The Hallel, Pss. 113–118..
Rabban Gamliel used to say, anybody who did not teach these three words on Passover did not fulfill his duty, Pesaḥ, mazzah, and bitter herbs. Pesaḥ because the Omnipresent passed over the houses of our forefathers in Egypt, mazzah because our forefathers were freed from Egypt81A reference to Ex. 12:39 is understood, but is not included in any reliable Mishnah ms.. Bitter herbs because the Egyptians embittered the lives of our forefathers in Egypt. In every generation a person is required to see himself as if he himself had gone out of Egypt, as it was said, you shall tell your son on that day, this is on account of what the Eternal did for me when I left Egypt. Therefore we are required to thank, sing His praise, laud, glorify, exalt, praise in perpetuity, to glorify, Him who did all these miracles for us82Since everybody has to consider himself as if he left Egypt, it is appropriate that here “our forefathers” are not mentioned, in contrast to the Mishnah in the Babli. and led us from slavery to freedom; let us say before Him Hallelujah83The Hallel, Pss. 113–118..
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Jerusalem Talmud Pesachim
MISHNAH: One mixes him the second cup, and here the son asks62He is supposed spontaneously to ask why this dinner is different from the usual set-up.. If the son does not know how to ask, his father instructs him63The following catalogue is an example of the questions with which the instruction may start. The order of the questions is the same in Maimonides’s text, different in the Babli.: What is the difference between this night and all other nights? For every night we dip once64As explained in Note 52., but this night we dip twice. For every night we eat leavened and unleavened bread, but this night only unleavened. For in all other nights we eat meat roasted, preserved65By extended cooking. This always is mentioned as a separate category of preparation of food., or cooked, but in this night only roasted. According to the son’s understanding the father teaches him66Along the lines explained in Mishnah 5. If children or women do not understand Hebrew, this implies the duty to translate the Haggadah text.. He starts with ignominy67As explained in Halakhah 5. and ends with praise and explains from “a lost Aramean was my father” until he finishes the paragraph68Deut. 26:5–8. The Babli text, “until he finishes the paragraph completely”, would instruct to include also v. 9, not included in the Haggadah text identical with Sifry Deut. on Deut. 26:5–8..
Rabban Gamliel used to say, anybody who did not teach these three words on Passover did not fulfill his duty, Pesaḥ, mazzah, and bitter herbs. Pesaḥ because the Omnipresent passed over the houses of our forefathers in Egypt, mazzah because our forefathers were freed from Egypt81A reference to Ex. 12:39 is understood, but is not included in any reliable Mishnah ms.. Bitter herbs because the Egyptians embittered the lives of our forefathers in Egypt. In every generation a person is required to see himself as if he himself had gone out of Egypt, as it was said, you shall tell your son on that day, this is on account of what the Eternal did for me when I left Egypt. Therefore we are required to thank, sing His praise, laud, glorify, exalt, praise in perpetuity, to glorify, Him who did all these miracles for us82Since everybody has to consider himself as if he left Egypt, it is appropriate that here “our forefathers” are not mentioned, in contrast to the Mishnah in the Babli. and led us from slavery to freedom; let us say before Him Hallelujah83The Hallel, Pss. 113–118..
Rabban Gamliel used to say, anybody who did not teach these three words on Passover did not fulfill his duty, Pesaḥ, mazzah, and bitter herbs. Pesaḥ because the Omnipresent passed over the houses of our forefathers in Egypt, mazzah because our forefathers were freed from Egypt81A reference to Ex. 12:39 is understood, but is not included in any reliable Mishnah ms.. Bitter herbs because the Egyptians embittered the lives of our forefathers in Egypt. In every generation a person is required to see himself as if he himself had gone out of Egypt, as it was said, you shall tell your son on that day, this is on account of what the Eternal did for me when I left Egypt. Therefore we are required to thank, sing His praise, laud, glorify, exalt, praise in perpetuity, to glorify, Him who did all these miracles for us82Since everybody has to consider himself as if he left Egypt, it is appropriate that here “our forefathers” are not mentioned, in contrast to the Mishnah in the Babli. and led us from slavery to freedom; let us say before Him Hallelujah83The Hallel, Pss. 113–118..
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Jerusalem Talmud Pesachim
MISHNAH: One mixes him the third cup, he says Grace102Which requires a cup of wine anyhow.. The fourth, over which he finishes the Hallel and recites the benediction of the song103The benediction after the recitation of the Hallel in the synagogue.. Between these cups104After the first cup up to the conclusion of the meal., he may drink if he wants to drink; between the third and the fourth he may not drink. After the Pesaḥ one may not serve afiqoman105While in Halakhah 4 this was interpreted as ἐπὶ κῶμον, the Halakhah here gives other interpretations..
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Jerusalem Talmud Pesachim
MISHNAH: One mixes him the third cup, he says Grace102Which requires a cup of wine anyhow.. The fourth, over which he finishes the Hallel and recites the benediction of the song103The benediction after the recitation of the Hallel in the synagogue.. Between these cups104After the first cup up to the conclusion of the meal., he may drink if he wants to drink; between the third and the fourth he may not drink. After the Pesaḥ one may not serve afiqoman105While in Halakhah 4 this was interpreted as ἐπὶ κῶμον, the Halakhah here gives other interpretations..
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Jerusalem Talmud Pesachim
MISHNAH: If part of them slept, they may eat; if all of them, they may not eat106Sacrifices become disqualified if they are not permanently guarded. If the entire company sleeps before the Pesaḥ is consumed, the meat automatically is disqualified and impure. Rebbi Yose says, if they107The entire company subscribing to one Pesaḥ. were sleepy, they may eat, if they slept they may not eat. The Pesaḥ after midnight110When rabbinically it may no longer be eaten (Mishnah Zevaḥim 5:8), it is treated as leftover. makes hands impure. Piggul111A sacrifice slaughtered with the intention of consuming it after its allotted time or at an unauthorized place. While it is a deadly sin to consume piggul, the impurity imposed on it is purely rabbinical and weaker than biblical impurity. and leftover112A qualified sacrifice left after the time allotted to its consumption. make the hands impure. If he recited the benediction for the Pesaḥ113“Praise to You, Eternal, our God, King of the universe, Who sanctified us by His commandments and commanded us to eat Pesaḥ” (Tosephta 10:13). it exempted that of the family sacrifice114“Praise to You, Eternal, our God, King of the universe, Who sanctified us by His commandments and commanded us to eat sacrifice.” For R. Ismael, the Pesaḥ is the main dish, the family sacrifice is a filler and does not need a separate benediction (Mishnah Berakhot 6:7). For R. Aqiba the two are coordinate, neither is subordinate to the other.; the one for the family sacrifice does not exempt the one for the Pesaḥ, the words of Rebbi Ismael. Rebbi Aqiba said, neither one exempts the other.
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Jerusalem Talmud Pesachim
MISHNAH: If part of them slept, they may eat; if all of them, they may not eat106Sacrifices become disqualified if they are not permanently guarded. If the entire company sleeps before the Pesaḥ is consumed, the meat automatically is disqualified and impure. Rebbi Yose says, if they107The entire company subscribing to one Pesaḥ. were sleepy, they may eat, if they slept they may not eat. The Pesaḥ after midnight110When rabbinically it may no longer be eaten (Mishnah Zevaḥim 5:8), it is treated as leftover. makes hands impure. Piggul111A sacrifice slaughtered with the intention of consuming it after its allotted time or at an unauthorized place. While it is a deadly sin to consume piggul, the impurity imposed on it is purely rabbinical and weaker than biblical impurity. and leftover112A qualified sacrifice left after the time allotted to its consumption. make the hands impure. If he recited the benediction for the Pesaḥ113“Praise to You, Eternal, our God, King of the universe, Who sanctified us by His commandments and commanded us to eat Pesaḥ” (Tosephta 10:13). it exempted that of the family sacrifice114“Praise to You, Eternal, our God, King of the universe, Who sanctified us by His commandments and commanded us to eat sacrifice.” For R. Ismael, the Pesaḥ is the main dish, the family sacrifice is a filler and does not need a separate benediction (Mishnah Berakhot 6:7). For R. Aqiba the two are coordinate, neither is subordinate to the other.; the one for the family sacrifice does not exempt the one for the Pesaḥ, the words of Rebbi Ismael. Rebbi Aqiba said, neither one exempts the other.
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