Mishnah
Mishnah

Commento su Makkot 3:2

הַטָּמֵא שֶׁאָכַל אֶת הַקֹּדֶשׁ, וְהַבָּא אֶל הַמִּקְדָּשׁ טָמֵא, וְהָאוֹכֵל חֵלֶב, וְדָם, וְנוֹתָר, וּפִגּוּל, וְטָמֵא, הַשּׁוֹחֵט וְהַמַּעֲלֶה בַחוּץ, וְהָאוֹכֵל חָמֵץ בְּפֶסַח, וְהָאוֹכֵל וְהָעוֹשֶׂה מְלָאכָה בְּיוֹם הַכִּפּוּרִים, וְהַמְפַטֵּם אֶת הַשֶּׁמֶן, וְהַמְפַטֵּם אֶת הַקְּטֹרֶת, וְהַסָּךְ בְּשֶׁמֶן הַמִּשְׁחָה, וְהָאוֹכֵל נְבֵלוֹת וּטְרֵפוֹת, שְׁקָצִים וּרְמָשִׂים. אָכַל טֶבֶל וּמַעֲשֵׂר רִאשׁוֹן שֶׁלֹּא נִטְּלָה תְרוּמָתוֹ, וּמַעֲשֵׂר שֵׁנִי וְהֶקְדֵּשׁ שֶׁלֹּא נִפְדּוּ. כַּמָּה יֹאכַל מִן הַטֶּבֶל וִיהֵא חַיָּב, רַבִּי שִׁמְעוֹן אוֹמֵר כָּל שֶׁהוּא, וַחֲכָמִים אוֹמְרִים כַּזַּיִת. אָמַר לָהֶם רַבִּי שִׁמְעוֹן, אֵין אַתֶּם מוֹדִים לִי בְּאוֹכֵל נְמָלָה כָּל שֶׁהוּא חַיָּב. אָמְרוּ לוֹ, מִפְּנֵי שֶׁהִיא כִבְרִיָּתָהּ. אָמַר לָהֶן, אַף חִטָּה אַחַת כִּבְרִיָּתָהּ:

(E questi sono quelli che ricevono strisce, ecc. ":) uno che mangia hekdesh in uno stato di impurità, uno che entra nel santuario in uno stato di impurità, uno che mangia grassi proibiti, sangue, nothar (parti di sacrifici lasciati oltre il tempo prescritto per mangiare), pigul (sacrifici invalidati per intento improprio) e cibo impuro, uno che macella o sacrifica (un'offerta) fuori (il Tempio), uno che mangia chametz su Pesach, uno che mangia o compie lavori su Yom Kippur, uno che compone l'olio [come era composto l'olio dell'unzione], uno che mescola l'incenso (mentre l'incenso del tempio era composto), uno che si unge con l'olio dell'unzione [composto da Mosè], uno che mangia carogne, treifah, animali e rettili proibiti, colui che mangia tevel (cibo non abbinato) [L'esortazione è di (Levitico 22:15): "E non profaneranno le cose sante dei figli d'Israele che porteranno alla L r. "La Scrittura parla di ciò che sarà sollevato (cioè, t evel, da cui il terumah sarà revocato)], e la decima la cui terumah non è stata presa, [anche questo comporta una responsabilità per la morte, vale a dire. (Numeri 18:27): "E il tuo teruma sarà considerato per te come grano dall'aia, ecc."] E seconda decima e hekdesh che non sono stati riscattati. [Non si può mangiare la seconda decima che è diventata impura, anche se si trova a Gerusalemme, a meno che non venga riscattato. E se uno lo mangia a Gerusalemme prima che venga redento, riceve delle strisce. La sua esortazione è tratta da (Deuteronomio 26:14): "Non l'ho consumato nell'impurità"—se fossi impuro e pulito, o fossi pulito e impuro. E da dove deriva che la seconda decima che è diventata impura è redenta a Gerusalemme? Da (Deuteronomio 14:24): "che non puoi vedere se'etho", "se'eth" riferendosi al mangiare, come in (Genesi 43:34): "E prese (cibo) porzioni (ma'asoth) da prima di lui ". ("e hekdesh che non è stato riscattato" :) Questo non è esplicitamente dichiarato, ma la sua esortazione è derivata dall'identità: "sin" (Levitico 5:15) - sin (Ibid. 22: 9), da Teruma. E anche se la Scrittura indica (Ibid.): "E moriranno per essa (terumah)", e non per me'ilah (abuso di hekdesh), essa (me'ilah) è esclusa dalla morte, ma non dall'esortazione .] Quanto deve mangiare di tevel per essere responsabile? R. Shimon dice: Qualsiasi importo. I saggi dicono: la dimensione di un'oliva. R. Shimon disse loro: Non mi concederai che se uno mangia una qualsiasi quantità di una formica è responsabile? [in ragione di (Levitico 11: 423): "... cose striscianti che si insinuano sulla terra", indipendentemente dalla quantità] Gli dissero: Perché è come creato. Disse loro: un grano è anche come creato! [L'halachah non è in accordo con R. Shimon, solo qualcosa che ha un'anima (animatrice) chiamata "creatura".]

Bartenura on Mishnah Makkot

המפטם את השמן – He who makes oil sample of the anointing out.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Makkot

An unclean person who ate holy meat (Leviticus 7:20, 12:4);
One who entered the sanctuary while unclean (Leviticus 12:4, Numbers 5:3, 19:13);
One who ate forbidden fat or blood (Leviticus 3:16, 7:23-27);
Or leftover sacrificial meats (Leviticus 19:6-8);
Or sacrifices that had been offered up with improper intention (Leviticus 7:18);
Or [an offering] that has became unclean (Leviticus 7:19);
One who slaughters, or offers up a sacrifice, outside the Temple precincts (Leviticus 17:4);
One who ate leavened [bread] during Passover (Exodus 12:15, 19);
One who partakes of food [or drink] or does work on the Day of Atonement (Leviticus 23:27-31);
One who puts together the ingredients for the [anointing] oil, or the ingredients for the incense, or anoints with the oil for anointing (Exodus 30:22-28):
One who eats an animal that died a natural death (Deuteronomy 14:21);
Or was improperly slaughtered (Exodus 22:30);
Or any of the [creatures deemed] ‘abominable’ and ‘teeming’ (Leviticus 11:11, 40).
One who eats non-tithed produce, or first-tithe from which heave offering has not been removed, or unredeemed second-tithe, or unredeemed sanctified property.
How much untithed produce is one to eat to become liable? Rabbi Shimon says: “Any amount.” The Sages say: “An olive's size.” Rabbi Shimon said to them: “Do you not admit that if one ate the minutest ant that he would be liable? They said to him: “[Only] because it is a whole creature.” He said to them: “Even a grain of wheat is a whole entity.”

The first fourteen sections of our mishnah mostly lists different types of forbidden foods and a few other Temple related prohibitions for which one is to be flogged. Section fifteen discusses the amount of untithed produce that if one eats he is liable for a transgression.
Section fifteen: According to Rabbi Shimon one is liable for flogging if he eats any amount of untithed produce, even a single grain. The Sages disagree and state that only if one eats an olive’s size of untithed produce is he liable for flogging. Less than that and he is exempt. Rabbi Shimon attempts to prove his point by making an analogy to eating an entire ant. All agree that if one eats an entire ant (on purpose) he is liable to be flogged, even though the ant is smaller than an olive. The Sages respond that one is liable for eating an ant since it is an entire creature. Since it is a distinct, full entity it is enough to make one who consumes it liable for punishment. Rabbi Shimon responds that a single grain is also a whole entity, and therefore one who eats a single grain of untithed produce is liable to be flogged as well.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Makkot

והסך בשמן המשחה – that Moses our teacher of blessed memory, made.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Makkot

אכל טבל – Its explicit prohibition is from (Leviticus 22:15): “But [the priests] must not allow the Israelites to profane the sacred donations that they set aside for the LORD.” The verse speaks of what they will donate in the future.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Makkot

ומעשר ראשון שלא נטלה תרומתו – and even he is [punished] with death, as it is written (Numbers 18:27): “This shall be accounted to you as your gift. As with the new grain from the threshing floor [or the flow from the vat].”
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Bartenura on Mishnah Makkot

ומעשר שני שלא נפדה – Second Tithe that became defiled and even if he is in Jerusalem, it is prohibited to eat it until it is redeemed, but a person who eats it in Jerusalem while it is not yet redeemed, is flogged. And its explicit prohibition is from (Deuteronomy 26:14): “I have not cleared out any of it while impure,” whether I am defiled and it is ritually pure, whether I am ritually pure and it is ritually impure. And from where do we learn that Second Tithe which was defiled – that we redeem it in Jerusalem? As it states (Deuteronomy 14:24): “…should you be unable to transport them,” is explained as you are unable to eat it, as it is written (Genesis 43:34): “Portions were served them from the table…”
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Bartenura on Mishnah Makkot

והקדש שלא נדפה – There is no prohibition written directly, but its explicit prohibition comes from an analogy of [the words] "חטא"\"חטא" /”sin,” “sin” – from the priest’s due, but even though the All-Merciful (i.e., God), excluded [the words] (Leviticus 22:9): “and they die for it,” but not through religious sacrilege, from death, [Scripture] excluded him, but not from an explicit prohibition.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Makkot

באוכל נמלה שהוא חייב – because (Leviticus 11:29): “…from among the things that swarm on the earth,” and even though it lacks according to the measure.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Makkot

אף חטה אחת כברייתה – But the Halakha is not according to Rabbi Shimon. And we don’t call it a creature – other than that which has in it a soul alone.
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