talmud geeking
Jan. 6th, 2003 10:46 pmTo give an example of the sort of thing I'm talking about, though you should assume that the details are ficticous:
Question: when is the correct time to say a certain evening prayer?
Rabbi Chanina: when priests can eat trumah (special meat).
Rabbi Akiva: when a poor man eats dinner.
Rabbi Yonatan: when a priest goes to the mikvah, which he has to
do before eating trumah.
Rabbi Chanina: Yonatan is wrong, because it's not dark yet then.
Rabbi Yehoshua: when Shabbat starts.
Rabbi Meir: When a priest eats trumah and when a poor man eats
dinner are the same time.
Rabbi Chanina: No it's not. When a poor man eats dinner and when
Shabbat starts are the same time.
Rashi: These are all different times.
And so on. In this particular case there ended up being a lot of layers to wind and unwind, and I'm still confused by the outcome. (Yes, the subject is the time of the evening shema, and most of the positions I gave are in the discussion somewhere, though not necessarily with those names attached.)
On my way out my rabbi said that with my internet skills I can probably find someone who can tell me the answer, but I'd actually prefer the challenge of working it out. I don't need the answer; I do need to develop the skill.
(no subject)
Date: 2003-01-07 06:10 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2003-01-07 09:13 am (UTC)Fun for the entire family! :-)