Mishnah
Mishnah

Comentário sobre Chagigá 1:8

הֶתֵּר נְדָרִים פּוֹרְחִין בָּאֲוִיר, וְאֵין לָהֶם עַל מַה שֶּׁיִּסְמֹכוּ. הִלְכוֹת שַׁבָּת, חֲגִיגוֹת וְהַמְּעִילוֹת, הֲרֵי הֵם כַּהֲרָרִים הַתְּלוּיִין בְּשַׂעֲרָה, שֶׁהֵן מִקְרָא מֻעָט וַהֲלָכוֹת מְרֻבּוֹת. הַדִּינִין וְהָעֲבוֹדוֹת, הַטָּהֳרוֹת וְהַטֻּמְאוֹת וַעֲרָיוֹת, יֵשׁ לָהֶן עַל מַה שֶּׁיִּסְמֹכוּ. הֵן הֵן גּוּפֵי תּוֹרָה:

A absolvição dos votos "voa no ar", não havendo suporte (bíblico) para isso. [ie, há apenas uma ligeira alusão nas Escrituras ao fato de um sábio ser capaz de absolver um de seus votos, e ele (por si só) não deve ser invocado. Mas assim foi transmitido aos sábios por meio da tradição oral (ou seja, que eles sejam assim fortalecidos)]. As leis do Shabbath, das ofertas festivas e de me'iloth (abuso de objetos consagrados) são como "montanhas penduradas por um fio de cabelo" [Há halachoth entre elas que se apóiam apenas em uma ligeira alusão das Escrituras, como uma montanha pendurada por um cabelo da cabeça], tendo poucos referentes das Escrituras, mas abraçando um grande corpo de halachoth. As leis (leis monetárias), o serviço sacrificial, (as leis da) pureza e impureza e (as leis das) relações ilícitas têm em que confiar (nas Escrituras). Ambos são essenciais da Torá. [A gemara explica: "Estes e estes são essenciais da Torá." Ou seja: Tanto aqueles que não têm suporte (bíblico) quanto os que têm. Tanto aqueles que são como "montanhas penduradas por um cabelo, etc."— todos são essenciais da Torá.]

Bartenura on Mishnah Chagigah

היתר נדרים פורחים באויר – there is a bit of an intimation in Scripture that a Sage would be able to release a vow, but one should not rely upon it, but this was transmitted to the Sages in the Oral Torah.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Chagigah

Introduction This mishnah, and the first two mishnayot of the next chapter, do not deal with the hagigah. Rather they are loosely connected to the end of the previous mishnah concerning the Torah scholar who separates from the Torah. Our mishnah deals with one issue which may have caused some rabbis to dismiss the Torah, especially the Oral Torah. There are many halakhot in the Mishnah which seem to have little connection to the Written Torah. Some rabbis may have rejected rabbinic learning claiming that the rabbis were just “making it up.” This was a common anti-rabbinic claim made throughout Jewish history, most famously by the Sadducees and later by the Karaites. Our mishnah acknowledges that some halakhot are indeed not well connected to Scripture and yet at the same time the mishnah seems to bequeath to these laws the same authority as those firmly anchored in the Written Torah.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Chagigah

הלכות שבת – and the laws of the Festival Offering and the laws of Sacrilege, each have many laws which are dependent upon intimations, with scant Scriptural [support] are like mountains suspended by the hair of the head.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Chagigah

[The laws concerning] the dissolution of vows hover in the air and have nothing to rest on. According to the rabbis, a sage has the power to dissolve a vow. This was a subject we covered when we learned Tractate Nedarim. However, there is no scriptural basis, no verses in the Torah, that give the rabbis (or anyone else) such power. These halakhot “hover in the air” meaning they are not grounded in the written Torah.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Chagigah

והעבודות – the laws of the Sacrificial Service.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Chagigah

The laws concerning Shabbat, hagigot, and trespassing are as mountains hanging by a hair, for they have scant scriptural basis but many halakhot. There are three categories of halakhah which have some scriptural basis, but not a lot and yet they have a lot of halakhot in the Mishnah and in other rabbinic works. The first of these is Shabbat. There were 24 chapters in Mishnah Shabbat and another 11 in Eruvin and yet the Torah barely discusses what types of work are prohibited on Shabbat. Hagigah, the subject of our tractate, is also another case of a lot of halakhah with little scriptural basis. The Torah only says the word “hag,” which the rabbis interpret to mean a sacrifice. This is not a lot of scriptural support for a whole tractate. Finally, “trespassing” which means illicit use of Temple property. There is a whole tractate called Meilah dedicate to this subject, and yet it too has scant scriptural support.
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Bartenura on Mishnah Chagigah

הן הן גופי תורה – The Gemara explains that they are the essence of Torah, that is to say, whether they lack upon what to be supported or are those which have upon what to be supported, or whether they are like mountains suspended by a hair, they are the essence of Torah.
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English Explanation of Mishnah Chagigah

[The laws concerning] civil cases and [Temple] worship, purity and impurity, and the forbidden relations have what to rest on, and they that are the essentials of the Torah. The Torah is full of verses dedicated to civil laws, the main topic of all of Seder Nezikin, Temple worship, the main topic of Seder Kodashim, purity laws, the main topic of Seder Toharot and the laws of forbidden relations, the main topic of large parts of Seder Nashim. These are the “essentials of Torah” in that the Torah dedicates to them more verses than to anything else.
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