Estudiar Biblia hebrea
Estudiar Biblia hebrea

Talmud sobre Exodo 25:5

וְעֹרֹ֨ת אֵילִ֧ם מְאָדָּמִ֛ים וְעֹרֹ֥ת תְּחָשִׁ֖ים וַעֲצֵ֥י שִׁטִּֽים׃

Y cueros de carneros teñidos de rojo, y cueros de tejones, y madera de Sittim;

Jerusalem Talmud Shabbat

“Who dyes it.” What kind of dying was in the Tabernacle? They were clobbering an animal for red skins of rams379Ex. 25:5, 26:14.. Rebbi Yose said, this implies that he is liable who causes a wound which results in echymosis380If the blue spot stays blue more than 24 hours.. He who colors his lips red is liable374In the Babli 95a this is characterized as R. Eliezer’s opinion and is not practice since it is only temporary painting.. He who causes bleeding, because of taking away life force at that place381Lev. 17:11. This does not refer to slaughter which is mentioned separately in Mishnah 3, but to a non-lethal wound. Babli 75a/b.. He who makes a shape, the first one is liable because of writing and the second one because of dying382Assuming that the first person draws an outline and the second fills it with color. The Babli 75b notes that if the object is decoration of the vessel, he also is liable because of “hitting with a hammer”.. If he left out a limb and another came and finished it, he is liable because of hitting with a hammer7A name for the formal end of any production process.. Wringing and washing are the same category of work. It was stated: Rebbi Ismael the son of Rebbi Joḥanan ben Beroqa says, the dyers in Jerusalem made wringing a separate category of work. In the opinion of Rebbi Ismael the son of Rebbi Joḥanan ben Beroqa, there are 40 categories of work383Since it is not listed separately in the Mishnah.. Should we state this? We come to state only items to which everybody agrees.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Jerusalem Talmud Shabbat

Rebbi Eleazar asked, may one make the Tent106Is a tent made of leather from an impure animal a tent in the meaning of Num.19 in which a corpse causes impurity for all persons and vessels inside. of leather from an impure animal? But is it not written107Ex. 25:5. Since taḥaš is not mentioned in the lists of pure animals in Lev. 11 and Deut. 14, one must assume that it was impure. But the Tabernacle is the prime example of a “tent”; if its cover was of leather from an impure animal the question should not arise., and taḥaš skins. 108A parallel exists in Eccl. rabba 1(28). Rebbi Jehudah, Rebbi Nehemiah and the rabbis. Rebbi Jehudah says, violet109Following Buxtorf, accepted by most moderns, this is Greek ἰάνθινος, -η, -ον, adj., “violet-colored”. In Eccl. r., one reads אלטינון.; it was called thus because of its color. Rebbi Nehemiah said, blue110This is identified as Greek γλαύκινος, -η, -ον, adj., “bluish-gray”. In Eccl. r., גלטינון.. But the rabbis say, a kind of pure animal which grows up in the desert. It comes like what Rebbi Eleazar ben Rebbi Yose, Rebbi Abbahu111Read: R. Abbahu (the Amora) in the name of R. Eleazar ben R. Yose (the Tanna)., Rebbi Simeon ben Laqish in the name of Rebbi Meïr said: 112The same interpretation in the Babli, 28b. The Holy One, praise to Him, created for Moses in the desert a kind of pure aniMal. After the work of the Tabernacle had been finished it was hidden. Rebbi Abun said, its name was qereš. Rebbi Hoshaia stated, a unicorn. It is preferable to the Eternal over a cattle ox which sprouts a horn and has split hooves113Ps. 69:32.. The All-Merciful wrote114The Psalms, as Holy Scriptures, are considered of divine origin., it sprouts a horn.
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy

Avot D'Rabbi Natan

Shemaya and Avatalyon received from them. Shemaya would say: Love work, hate power, and do not become too familiar with the authorities.
Love work.” How so? This teaches us that a person should love work, and not hate work. For just as the Torah was given in a covenant, so work was given in a covenant, as it says (Exodus 20:10), “For six days you shall labor and do all your work, and the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Eternal your God.” Rabbi Akiva would say: Sometimes a person labors and escapes death, and sometimes a person does not labor and becomes liable for death from Heaven. How so? Say a person sat around all week and did no labor, and then on the eve of the Sabbath he had nothing to eat. But he had money that had been designated [to the Temple] in his house. So he took from this and ate, and thus became liable to death from Heaven. However, if he had labored on the building of the Temple, then even though they paid him in money designated for the Temple and he took that money and used it for food, he would still escape the death penalty.
Rabbi Dostai would say: How do we know that if someone did no work all six days, he will end up doing work on the seventh? For, see, if he sat all the days of the week and did no work, and then on the eve of the Sabbath he had nothing to eat, he would then go out looking, and end up seized by conscription officers, who would grab him by the collar and force him to do on the Sabbath all the work that he did not do for six days.
Rabbi Shimon ben Elazar would say: Even Adam did not taste anything until he worked, as it says (Genesis 2:15–16), “And God placed him in the garden, to work it and guard it”; and then [it says (verse 17)], “From every tree of the garden you may certainly eat.”
Rabbi Tarfon would say: Even the Holy Blessed One did not rest His presence upon Israel until they had done work, as it says (Exodus 25:5), “Make Me a Sanctuary, and I will dwell among them.”
Rabbi Yehudah ben Beteira would say: If someone who has no work to do, what should he do? If he has a dilapidated yard or field, he should go and work on them, as it says (Exodus 20:10), “Six days you shall labor and do all your work.” What do we learn from the phrase, “do all your work”? That even someone who has dilapidated yards or fields should work on them.
Rabbi Yosei HaGalili would say: A person dies only because of idleness, as it says (Genesis 49:33), “And he expired [or: exhausted himself], and so was gathered to his people.”1It does not say that Jacob “died,” only that he was “gathered to his people.” Rabbi Yosei is reading that as a reward for “exhausting himself,” i.e., not being idle. And see, if someone is pushed and falls over on his own craftwork and dies, we know his death was because of idleness. And if he was standing on the top of the roof, the top of a palace, or the top of any building, or at the edge of the river, and he fell and died, we know his death was because of idleness.
All this we know to be true for men. And how do we know it is also true for women? For it says (Exodus 36:6), “Let no man or woman do any more work for the donations to the Sanctuary.” And how do we know it is true also for children? For it says (there), “So the people stopped bringing.”
Rabbi Natan said: When Moses was carrying out the work of the Tabernacle, he did not want to take direction from the chiefs of Israel. So the chiefs of Israel sat there quietly and said: Perhaps now Moses will need our help. When they heard the announcement in the camp that said enough work had been done, they said: Alas, we have not participated at all in the work of the Tabernacle! So they got up and added a great thing by themselves, as it says (Exodus 35:27), “And the chiefs brought the shoham stones [for the breastplate of the high priest].”
Ask RabbiBookmarkShareCopy
Versículo anteriorCapítulo completoVersículo siguiente