Hebräische Bibel
Hebräische Bibel

Kommentar zu Jechezkiel 44:37

Rashi on Ezekiel

shall be closed Our Rabbis interpreted this verse as referring to the southern wicket, for the gate of the Heichal had a wicket, a small entrance. So we learned in Tractate Middoth (4:2): The Great Gate had two wickets, one in the south and one in the north. No one ever entered the one in the south, of which Ezekiel says, “This gate shall be closed.”
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Rashi on Ezekiel

comes through it in the future.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

The prince [I permit]; he is a prince, etc. The prince I give permission. He is a prince, and is esteemed, and it is not fitting for him to sit and eat with the rest of the priests in the chambers.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

he shall sit therein in its space.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

by way of the hall of the gate he shall come When he enters the Inner Court in order to enter this small gate to eat therein, he shall enter by way of the hall of the Court’s eastern gate and leave the same way. Now since it states below (46:9), concerning: “But when the people of the land come before the Lord on the Festivals, he who enters by way of, etc.” Scripture commanded making the Court a shortcut since that entry was [made] for the sake of appearing [before God]. He must therefore be well seen [i.e., throughout the entire Court]. It was necessary to specify here concerning visits during the rest of the year that he should not make it a shortcut because this visit is not for the sake of appearing, as is that of the Pilgrimage Festivals. This matter is corroborated many more times in this account.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

The prince The High Priest is a prince, and because of his importance he will be permitted to eat the meat and bread of hallowed status in that gate, which is opened for him at the time of his eating.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

by way of the hall of the gate he shall come By way of the hall of the Eastern Gate he shall enter the Court and come up to that wicket to eat his bread therein.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

and by the same way he shall leave For this is not fit for a shortcut, as are the rest of the gates. Throughout the day, when not during the time of the prince’s eating, it shall be closed.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

aliens [lit. sons of an alien.] [Sons of] one whose deeds have become alienated from his Father in Heaven; this is an apostate who worships idols. They are the ones “of uncircumcised heart.”
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Rashi on Ezekiel

and of uncircumcised flesh [a] priest whose brothers died because of circumcision.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

And you appointed keepers of My watch in My Sanctuary You knowingly appointed in My Sanctuary, people who are not fit to be keepers of My watch.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

Only the Levites who distanced themselves Only thus shall you do to the Levites who distanced [themselves] from Me and became idolatrous priests and have now repented...
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Rashi on Ezekiel

and they shall bear their iniquity from ever approaching My altar again, but they may be appointed to the gates of the House (comandises in Old French, orders). They shall be watchmen and gatekeepers.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

they shall slaughter the burnt offering a service that is valid [if performed] by non priests, slaves, or women.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

as a stumbling block of iniquity priests of idolatry, attracting them to it.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

But the priests, the Levites [i.e., the priests, who are] of the tribe of Levi.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

the sons of Zadok Since he was the High Priest who served as the first one in the Sanctuary of Solomon’s days, they are called by his name.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

when...went astray [Heb. בִּתְעוֹת,] quand ils erraient, in Fr., when they strayed.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

when they enter the gates of the Inner Court the Inner Sanctum on the Day of Atonement.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

and no wool shall be upon them They shall not wear the blue wool that was in the robe and girdle on the Day of Atonement during the service in the Inner Court.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

they shall not gird themselves in a place that sweats We learned in a baraitha (Zeb. 18b, 19a): They do not gird themselves in a place where they sweat, neither above their elbows nor below their loins, which is a place of sweat, en la suor in O.F., on (whatever causes) sweat. Another explanation: The Torah prohibited the priests from wearing woolen raiment because wool causes the body to sweat (not found in some editions).
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Rashi on Ezekiel

hats [Heb. פַאֲרֵי.] c(h)apelas in O.F., hats, head dress.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

into the Outer Court, into the Outer Court Since he was speaking of the Heichal and the Inner Sanctum, and he called them the “Inner Court,” and in relation to them, he should call the Israelites’ Court an “Outer Court,” he therefore had to double it twice to say that he is speaking of the Men’s Court, the area that all Israel enter.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

and place them in chambers belonging to the Sanctuary as stated by our master Moses, may he rest in peace (Lev. 16:23): “after that, he shall take off the linen garments which he had put on, etc., and he shall leave them there.”
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Rashi on Ezekiel

and they shall not sanctify the people [Heb. וְלֹא יְקַדְשׁוּ אֶתהָעָם, lit. they shall not sanctify the people.] Jonathan renders: and they shall not mingle with the people in their garments, [i.e.,] they shall not touch the people with their holy garments, for ordinary garments are not ritually clean as regards [contaminating] holy garments.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

And [the hair of] their heads they are not to shave to remove all the hair.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

but also not to let it grow wild They may not let their hair grow very long.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

they must be careful to trim [Heb. כָּסוּם יִכְסְמוּ, (to cut the hair so that it appears)] like spelt (כֻּסֶמֶת), which is arranged on the ear [with] the end of one beside the root of another. So I heard in the name of Rabbi Menahem of blessed memory. It is possible to explain it as an expression for a measure of a medium thing, neither shearing [all the hair of] the head nor letting the hair grow long, but a medium amount, amo(d)ler in O.F., to cut to medium length.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

when they come into the Inner Court to the Heichal.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

but...virgins may the High Priests take. But there are some priests who may take a widow, namely, the ordinary ones, and this is the meaning of “some of the priests may marry”; there are some priests who are permitted to marry a widow.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

who is only a widow A real [widow], excluding a divorcee and a woman upon whom the rite of chalitzah was performed; although she is unmarried, she is forbidden even for an ordinary [priest].
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Rashi on Ezekiel

And after his purification and after he has separated from the corpse. So was it taught in Moed Katan (15b).
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Rashi on Ezekiel

And on the day that he enters into the Sanctuary for the first time to initiate himself into the service, he shall offer up his sin-offering; this is his one tenth of an ephah [of flour]. In Moed Katan (16a) the following is taught: the regular priest requires one tenth of an ephah on the day of his initiation, as it is stated (Lev. 6:13): “This is the offering of Aaron and his sons, etc.” and as is explained in Tractate Menachoth (51b).
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Rashi on Ezekiel

It shall be to them the priesthood, for an inheritance.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

and everything that is holy [Heb. חֶרֶם,] an expression of sanctity, and so is every expression of חֶרֶם [when used] in the context of hallowed things.
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Rashi on Ezekiel

to bring enduring blessings into your home [Heb. לְהָנִיחַ,] aposer on O.F., (to cause) to rest, settle, as in (Exod. 10:14): “and it rested (וֳיָנָח) throughout all the borders of Egypt.”
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Rashi on Ezekiel

Anything that has died of itself or is fatally wounded, etc. Since nipping the neck of the bird sin- offering was permitted, which is [tantamount to] an animal that died of itself or was fatally wounded [since it is not the normal method of slaughter], he had to warn them concerning [eating] other creatures that died of themselves or were fatally wounded. So our Sages explain.
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